iiiilDlJS& LIST AUG 1 1924
y
READINGS IN THE
ECONOMIC HISTORY OF
THE UNITED STATES
^y
The Economic History of the United States
By Ernest Ludlow Bogart, Ph.D. Professor of
Economics, University of Illinois. With Maps and
Illustrations. Crown 8vo. Net $1.75.
Exercise Book in Economic History of the
United States.
By E. L. Bogart'^^jd C. M. Thompson. $0.50.
■'^.
LONGMANS, GREEN AND CO.
READINGS IN THE
ECONOMIC HISTORY OF
THE UNITED STATES
\9
BY
ERNEST LUDLOW BOGART, Ph.D.
AND
CHARLES MANFRED THOMPSON, Ph.D.
OF THE DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS
UmVERSITY OF ILLINOIS
NEW IMPRESSION
LONGMANS, GREEN AND CO.
FOURTH AVENUE & 30TH STREET, NEW YORK
PRAIRIE AVENUE & 25TH STREET, CHICAGO
LONDON, BOMBAY, CALCUTTA, AND MADRAS
I9I7
4
COPYRIGHT, I916
BT LONGMANS, GREEN AND CO.
First Edition, June, 1916
Reprinted, December, 19 16
>^
TO
DAVID KINLEY
COLLEAGUE AND FRIEND
^>
PREFACE
The need of providing large college classes with collateral reading
in a course on the economic history of the United States has led to
the preparation of this book. Its purpose has therefore been pri-
marily to provide a sufficient body of material to supplement the
more systematic text book and lectures. This material has, with
only one or two exceptions, been drawn from contemporary sources;
in the later periods, with the growing wealth of such material,
official documents have been largely used. But in every period
these documents have been supplemented by the more human and
the more illuminating comments of travelers, observers, and others
who were entitled to speak authoritatively. Where controversial
matters have been treated, every effort has been made to present
both sides fairly.
In the face of the great amount of material available for such a
work as this the main task of the editors has necessarily been one of
selection, and in performing this task they have endeavored to present
a comprehensive yet balanced picture of the economic activities and
development of each period. Agriculture, manufactures, tariff, com-
merce, transportation, money and banking, labor, and the movement
of the population have, each in turn, been given due emphasis in the
panoramic picture here unfolded. As among the different periods it
is believed that a balance has been maintained that will commend
itself to teachers of American history. To the period from 1600 to
1808 about one fourth of the book is devoted; one half to that from
1808 to i860; and the remaining fourth to the period since the
Civil War.
No effort has been made to adapt this book of readings to use
with any particular text, and it is hoped that teachers of United
States history in general will find it of value in presenting some
phases of our development which do not always find a place in
poHtical histories.
E. L. BOGART
C. M. THOMPSON
University of Illinois
.f
*>
Contents
CHAPTER I
EXPLORATION AND COLONIZATION, 1583-1774
I. Methods of Planting a Colony page
A. The Cost of Colonizing, 1648. By Beauchamp Plantagenet i
B. Articles of Agreement of Plymouth Plantation, 1620. By William
Bradford 3
C. Disadvantages of a Common Store, 1620. By William Bradford 4
II. Suggestions to Colonists
A. The Advantages of Colonies, 1583. By Sir Humphrey Gilbert. . 6
B. Advice to Colonists to New England, 1621. By Governor Edward
Winslow 9
C. Information respecting Land in New Netherland, 1650. By Secre-
tary van Tienhoven 11
D. Advice to Immigrants to Maryland, 1655. By John Hammond. . 14
'E. An Invitation to Colonists for Carolina, 1666. By Robert Home 15
F. Advice to Immigrants to South Carolina, 17 31. By J. P. Purry 17
G. Design of Establishing the Colony in Georgia, 1733. By General
James Oglethorpe 19
H. Information to Those Who Would Remove to America, 1760. By
Benjamin Franklin 20
III. Grants of Land and Land Tenure
A. New England Laws on Inheritance, 1641. From Laws cf New
England 22
B. Advice on Granting Lands, 1665. By James Woodward 23
C. Grants of Land by Governors, 1774. From Information Collected by
Board of Trade 24
D. Methods of Granting Lands, 1773. By Captain Williams 26
CHAPTER II
AGRICULTURE, INDUSTRY, AND TRADE, 1607-1763
AGRICULTURE
I. Methods of the Indians
Indian Agriculture in Virginia, 1612. By Captain John Smith ... 28
IL Agriculture in New England
Poor Farming by New Englanders, 1775. By the author of American
Husbandry 29
X CONTENTS
in. Agriculture in the Middle Colonies
A. Agriculture in New York, 1775. By the author of American
Hmbandry 32
B. Agriculture in New Jersey, 1749. By Peter Kalm 34
IV. Agriculture in the South
A. A Colonial Plantation, j686. By Colonel William Fitzhugh 35
B. Tobacco Cultivation in Virginia, 1650. By Reverend John Clayton. 37
C. Tobacco the Sole Crop in Virginia, 1703. By Colonel Robert
Quary 38
D. Diversified Agriculture in Virginia, 177J. By the author of
American Husbandry 38
E. Cattle in South Carolina, 1731. By J. P. Piirry and others 39
F. Agriculture and Stock-raising in North Carolitia, 1775. By the
author of American Husbandry 40
INDUSTRY
I. General Description
State of the British Plantations in America, 1721. By the Lords
Commissioners for Trade and Plantations . . . .' 42
II. Extractive Industries
A. Products of the Forest, 1650. By E. W. Gent 53
B. Naval Stores in South Carolina, 1699. By Edward Randolph .... 54
C. Shipbuilding in Massachusetts, 1607-1724. By George Henry
Preble 55
D. Fur Trade Gained by the French, 1755. By William Clarke. . . 57
E. Fishing in New England, 1624. By Captain John Smith 58
F. Advantages of American Fisheries, 1790. By Thomas J cf arson. 59
III. Manufacturing Industries
A. Colonial Manufactures, 1732. By the Lords Commissioners for
Trade and Plantations 60
B. Few Manufactures in New York, 1732. By Governor W. Cosby. . 65
C. Manufactures in New York, 1767. By Governor H. Moore 66
D. Domestic Manufacturing in New England, 1761. By Edmund
Burke 68
TRADE
I. Trade between England and the British Colonies in America
An Early View of Colonial Trade, 1729. By Joshua Gee 69
n. New England
A. Commerce of New England, 1748. By Peter Kalm 71
B. Carrying Trade of New Englatui, 1761. By Edmutul Burke 71
C. Exports of New England, 1763. By the author of American
Husbandry 73
III. Middle Colonies
A. Foreign Trade of New York, 1748. By Peter Kalm ,.\
B. Exports of New York and Pennsylvania, 1763-1766. By the author
0/ American Husbandry 77
p
CONTENTS xi
IV. Southern Colonies
A. Report on Virginia, 167 1. By Governor William Berkeley 78
B. Exports of the Southern Colonies, 1763. By the author of American
Husbandry 80
CHAPTER III
LABOR, EXCHANGE, AND POPULATION, 1607-1763
LABOR
I. Scarcity of Labor
A. High Wages in Pennsylvania, 1698. By Gabriel Thomas 82
B. High Wages in New England, 1775. By the author of American
Husbandry 83
II. Indented Servants
A. Servants and Slaves in America, 1748. By Peter Kalm 84
B. Work of a Servant in Virginia, 1656. By John Hammond 87
C. Servants in Pennsylvania, 1775. By the author of American
Husbandry 88
HI. Slave Labor
A. The Slave Trade to Virginia,. 1708. By Colonel E. Jenings 89
B. Request of a Missionary for Slaves, 17 16. By John Urmstone. . . 91
C. Objections to the Prohibition of Rum and Slaves in Georgia, 1738.
By Pat. Tailfer and others 92
D. Answer of the Trustees, 1739. By the Trustees of the Colony of
Georgia 94
E. Unprofitableness of Slavery, 1774. By Philip V. Fithian 95
EXCHANGE
I. Commodity Money
A. Commodity Money in North Carolina, 1749. By Governor Johnston 96
B. Tobacco Notes in Virginia, 1781. By the Marquis de Chastellux .... 97
II. Credit Money
A. A Defence of Paper Money by a Colonial Governor, 1724. By
Governor W. Burnet 98
B. The Land Bank and the Extension of the Bubble Act to the Colonies,
1741. By Governor Thomas Hutchinson 100
C. The Necessity of Paper Money in the Colonies, 1764. By Thomas '
Pownall 104
III. Retail Trade
Market at Philadelphia, 1748. By Peter Kalm 105
POPULATION
I. Growth of the Population
A. The Increase of Mankind, 1755. By Benjamin Franklin 106
B. Population of the British American Colonies, 17 52-1755. By the
Lords Commissioners for Trade and Plantations 108
C. Large Families in America, 1748. By Peter Kalm. 109
xii CONTENTS
n. Condition of the People
A. A Prosperous People^ 177 5' By the author of American Hus-
bandry 1 10
B. The People of New York, I75g. By Andrew Burnaby 112
C. An Adverse View of the Virginians, 1759. By Andrew Burnaby 113
CIL\PTER IV
ENGLISH COLONIAL THEORY AND POLICY, 1651-1763
I. The Mercantile System
A Modern Interpretation, 18S2. By Professor Gustav Schmoller 115
II. The English Colonial Policy
A. The Navigation Act of 1660. From Statutes of the Realm 118
B. The Navigation Act of 1663. From Statutes of the Realm 120
C. The English Colonial System: a Favorable View, 1688. By Sir
Josiah Child 121
D. The English Colonial System: an Unfavorable View, 1776. By
Adam Smith 123
in. Workings of the Colonial Policy in England
A. Balance of Trade Theory, 1630. By Thomas Mun 128
B. The Purpose of the Navigation Acts, 1764. By Thomas Pownall. . 129
C. Advantage to England of Colonial Shipping, 1740. ■ By John
Ashley 130
D. The Colonies a Source of Raw Materials, 1775. By the author of
American Husbandry 131
E. The Colonies as a Market for British Manufactures, 1755. By
William Clarke 132
F. Trade between England and her North American Colonies, 1700-
1780. By Lord John Sheffield 133
IV. Workings of the Colonial Policy in the Colonies
A. Arguments for and against the Molasses Act, 17 31. By Adam
A nderson 134
B. Ineffiectiveness of the Molasses Act, 1740. By John Ashley 136
C. Smuggling in the Colonies, 1757. By Sir Charles Hardy 137
D. An Act to Prevent Iron Manufactures in the Colonies, 17 19. By
Adam Anderson 139
E. Colonies Levy Tariffi Duties on British Goods, 1718. From Acts of
the Privy Council 140
F. Tobacco Growing Suppressed in England, 161 9-1670. From Acts
of the Privy Council 141
G. Bounties on Colonial Produce, 1764. By David Macpherson. . . 142
CHAPTER V
ECONOMIC CAUSES AND CONDUCT OF THE REVOLUTION, 1764^1783
I. Economic Causes op the Revolution
A. Ptar of French Kept Colonies Loyal, 1748. By Peter Kalm 143
B. Prohibition of Western Expansion, 1763-1772, By the Privy
Council 144
CONTENTS xiii
C. The Prohibition of Colonial Paper Money, 1764. By Benjamin
Franklin 146
D. Remonstrance of New York Assembly against Prohibition of Paper
Money, 1775. From Hansard's History of England 147
E. The Enforcement of the Navigation Acts, 1764. By Adam
Anderson 148
F. The Sugar Act of 1764. By Governor Francis Bernard 152
G. Grievances of the Colonists, 1764. By Thomas Pownall 153
H. Opposition to Acts of Trade, 1775. By John Adams 155
I. Testimony on the Stamp Act, 1765. By Benjamin Franklin 155
J. Causes of American Discontent before 1768. By Benjamin Franklin 159
K. Opposition to Tax on Tea due to Smugglers, 1770. By John Adams 161
L. Defence of the Navigation Acts, I76g. By Sir George Grenvillle 162
M. Causes of the Revolution, 1776. By Dean Josiah Tucker 164
II. Non-importation as a Means of Pressure
A. Unfavorable Balance of Trade of the Northern American Colonies,
1700-1773. By Lord John Sheffield 166
B. Non-importation Agreements in Boston and New York, 1768. From
Anderson's Origin of Commerce 167
C. Effect in England of the Stamp Act, 1765. By Adam Smith 169
D. Non-importation in North Carolina, 1774. By the Freeholders in
Rowan County 169
E. Petition of London Merchants for Reconciliation, 1775. From Han-
sard's History of England 1 70
F. Petition of West India Planters for Reconciliation, 1775. From
Hansard's History of England 173
III. Continental Paper Money
A. Continental Paper Money, 177 5-1780. By Benjamin Franklin. . . 175
B. Depreciation of Continental Paper Money, 1775-1779- By Thomas
Jefferson 176
C. Effects of Continental Paper Money, 1775-1780. By David
Ramsay 178
D. Issues of Paper Money in the States, 1781-1788. By Brissot de
Warville i79
IV. Social Effects of the Revolution
Views of a Contemporary, 1775-1783. By David Ramsay 181
CHAPTER VI
AMERICAN COMMERCE AND COMMERCIAL POLICY, 1 783-181 2
I. Efforts to Secure a Commercial Treaty with England
A. England should not make a Commercial Treaty with the United
States, 1783. By Lord John Sheffield 185
B. Why England would not make a Commercial Treaty, 1785. By the
Duke of Dorset 187
xiv CONTENTS
C. British Merchants sure of the American Market, 1776. By Dean
Josiah Tucker 188
D. Advantages of the English Market to Americans, 178 j. By Lord
John Sheffield 189
E. Trade between England and the United States, 1784-17QO. By
Timothy Pitkin 191
n. Effects of the Failure to Negotiate a Commercial Treaty
A. Trade between the West Indies and North America before 1774. By
Bryan Edwards 192
B. The West Indies should not be Opened to American Trade, 1783.
By Lord John Sheffield 193
C. American Vessels should be Admitted to Trade with the West Indies,
1784. By William Bingham 193
D. Effects of the Prohibition of Trade between the West Indies and the
United States, 1780-1787. By Bryan Edwards 194
in. Economic Reasons for the Constitution
A. Commercial Difficulties Led to Constitution, 1 783-1 78g. By Adam
Seybert 197
B. Economic Reasons in Favor of the Constitution, 1787. By Alexander
Hamilton 199
IV. Expansion of American Commerce
A. Commerce more profitable than Manufactures, 1787. By Brissot
de Warville. . ., 2cx)
B The Trade with the Orient, 1784-1800. By Timothy Pitkin 202
C. The Coasting Trade, 1791. By Tench Coxe 203
D. Shipbuilding in the United States, 1783-1789. By Phineas Bond. . 204
E. Comparative Cost of American and French Ships, 1791. By Tench
Coxe 205
F. Comparaiive Cost of Operation of American and English Vessels,
1805. From Report of British Committee of Correspondence on
Trade 206
G. Foreign Commerce, 1789-1807. By Adam Seybert 206
H. Tonnage in Foreign and Coasting Trade, 1789-181^. By Timothy
Pitkin 208
V. Interference with the Neutral Trade
A. Growth of the Neutral Trade, 1791-1816. By Timothy Pitkin 208
B. Frauds of the Neutral Flags, 1805. By James Stephen 209
C. British Orders in Council and French Decrees, 1803-1808. By the
Senate Committee on Negotiations with Great Britain 211
D. Ejffect of the Embargo on New York City, 1807. By John Lambert. . 214
E. War of i8ia. By the House Committee on Foreign Relations . .
CONTENTS XV
CHAPTER VII
AGRICULTURE, SLAVERY, AND INTERNAL TRADE, 178 3-1808
I. Agriculture in the North
A. Efect of the Revolution on Agriculture, lySj-iySg. By Phineas
Bond 219
B. Agriculture in the United States, 1792. By Tench Coxe 220
II. Agriculture in the South
A. Agriculture in Virginia, 1787. By George Washington 221
B. Farming in Marylatid and Virginia, 1788. By Brissotde Warville. . 222
C. Care of Live Stock, 1794. By George Washington 223
D. History of Cotton Growing, I775~i795- By David Ramsay 224
E. Invention of the Cotton Gin, 1793. By Eli Whitney 225
F. Efect of the Cotton Gin upon Export of Cotton, 1791-1811. By
Adam Seybert 227
G. A griculture in the Carolinas and Georgia, 1802. ByF.A. Michaux 228
III. Slavery
A. Poor Whites atui Slaves in Virginia, 1780. By the Marquis de
Chastellux 229
B. Decline of Slavery, 1788. By Brissot de Warville 231
C. Slavery in the South, 1795. By Isaac Weld, Junior 232
IV. Pioneering and Agriculture in the West
A. Land the Lodestone to the West, 1772-1774. By Jos. Doddridge. . . 234
B. Pioneering in Kentucky, 1780-1790. By G. Imlay 234
C. Live-stock Farming in Ohio, 1806. By Thomas Ashe 236
V. Public Lands
A. Democratic Land Holding, 1793. By Isaac Weld, Junior 237
B. Speculation in Public Lands, 1806. By Thomas Ashe . . 237
C. Sale of Public Lands, 1796-1816. By Timothy Pitkin 239
VI. Internal Trade and Transportation
A. By Stage from Boston to Savannah, 1802. By F. A. Michaux. .. . 240
B. Traveling by Wagon, 1806. By John Lambert 240
C. Bad Roads in 1810. By Margaret Van Horn Dwight 241
D. Traveling from the East to Kentucky, 1793. By G. Imlay . 241
E. Trade down the Mississippi River, 1795. By Isaac Weld, Junior. . 244
F. Trade along the Western Rivers, 1802. By F. A. Michaux 244
G. Trade at Pittsburg, 1803. By T. M. Harris 246
H. Character of Western Trade, 1806. By Thomas Ashe 246
I. The Peddler as a Distributor of Goods, 1797. By Timothy Dwight. . 249
J. The Invention of the Steamboat, 1807. By Robert Fulton 250
xvi CONTENTS
CHAPTER VIII
INTRODUCTION OF MANUFACTURES AND CONDITION OF THE
PEOPLE, 1775-1816
I. Manufactures
A. LiUle Manufacturing for Sale, 1775. By the author of American
Husbandry 252
B. Obstacles to Manufactures, 1776. By Dean Josiah Tucker 252
C. Manufactures after the Revolution, 1788. By Brissot de Warville. . . 253
D. Manufactures before 178^. By Phineas Bofid 255
E. A Petition for Protection, 178^. From Annals of Congress 256
F. Report on Manufactures, 1791. By Alexatider Hamilton 257
G. Progress of Manufactures, 17Q3. By Tench Coxe 266
H. Decline of Manufactures, 1795. By W . Winterbotham 267
I. Domestic Manufactures in the Back Country, 1807. By John
Lambert 268
11. Condition of the People
A. American Characteristics, 1816. By John Bristed 268
B. Wages and Cost of Living, 1802. By F. A. Michaux 271
C. Unwholesome Dietary, 1797. By C. F. Volney 272
D. Intemperance, 1802. By F. A. Michaux 272
E. Education, 1816. By D. B. Warden 273
F. Post-offices and RcUes, 17 91-18 16. By A. Seybert 274
CHAPTER DC
THE DEVELOPMENT OF MANUFACTURES, 1800-1860
I. General View of Manufactures, 18 10-1860
A. Gallatin's Report on Manufactures, 1810. From American State
Papers 276
B. Leading Manufactures in 1840. From Sixth Census 282
C. Viru) of Manufactures in i860. From Eighth Census 282
XL Progress of Cotton Manufactures, 1806- 1860
A. Cotton Manufactures in Massachusetts, 1806. By John Melish .... 285
B. State of Cotton Manufactures in j8i6. From A nnals of Congress 286
C. Historical Sketch of Cotton Manufactures before 18 jj. By Thomas
P. KeUdl 287
D. A View of CoUon Manufactures in i860. Prom Eighth Census 291
nL The Woolen Industry, 1811-1860
A. Woolen Cloth for Army Uniforms, 181 1. From Niles* Register. . 293
B. Eariy A gitation for Sheep Raising, 181 1. From Niles' Register . 293
C. Stateof the Woolen Industry in i8t6. From Annals of Congress. . . 294
D. The Woolen Industry in i860. From Eighth Census 295
CONTENTS xvii
IV. Development of the Iron and Steel Industry.
View in i860. From Eighth Census 297
V. The Leather Industry
Development during the Decade 1850-1860. From Eighth Census . . . 300
VI. The Boston Shoe Trade
Extent and Value of Shipments in 18^9. From Hunt's Merchants'
Magazine 302
VII. Miscellaneous Manufactures '
Extent, Variety, and Value in i860. From Eighth Census 303
CHAPTER X
THE TARIFF, 1 808-1 860
I. Encouragement to Manufactures
Gallatin's Plans, 18 10. From American State Papers 309
II. Need of Protection
Recommendation of President Madison, 181 5. By James Madison.. . . 310
III. Arguments for a Protective Tariff
Views of Congress, 18 16. From Annals of Congress 311
IV. The Tariff Controversy of 1824
A. The ''American System." By Henry Clay 313
B. A New Englander's Views on Protection. By Daniel Webster 316
C. A Southern View on the Tariff. By George McDiiffie 320
V. Free Trade Arguments
Memorial on Free Trade, 18 31. By Albert Gallatin 321
VI. The Tariff and Sectionalism
A View of the Situation, 1824-18 33. By Thomas H. Benton 323
VII. A Temporary Adjustment of Conflicting Interests
The Compromise Tariff of 18 jj. By Henry Clay 326
VIII. Reaction from Protection
Arguments for Lower Duties on Imports, 1845. By Robert J . Walker 327
IX. Arguments for Protection
The Case Stated, 1849. By Henry C. Carey 2;^^
CHAPTER XI
THE WESTWARD MOVEMENT, 1817-1860
I. The Effect on the People of Territorial Expansion
An Explanation of American Characteristics, 1843. From Hunt's Mer-
chants' Magazine 338
II. Advice to Emigrants
A. Foreign Immigration and the Westward Movement, 1816. By
John Melish 342
xviii CONTENTS
B. Opportunities in the West, 1817. By Morris Birkbeck 347
C. RotOes to the West, 1837. By J. M. Peck 349
D. Modes of Traveling, 1818. By H. B. Fearon 350
in. Moving Westward
A. Doum the Ohio River, 1820. By James Hall 352
B. Travel by Land, 1817. By Morris Birkbeck 352
C. Spirit of the Emigrant, 1820, By James Hall 353
D. On the National Road, 1840. By J. S. Buckingham 355
rV. Frontier Classes of Population
The Restlessness of the Frontiersman, 1837. By J. M. Peck 356
V. AcnvrriES op the Western Country
Manufactures and Agriculture, 1832. By Timothy Flint 357
VI. In the New Country
A. Locating and Building a Home, 18 J2. By Timothy Flint 360
B. Effect of the New Home on the Character of the Emigrant, i8j2. By
Timothy Flint 366
VII. Stages of Settlement
The Frontier Line, 1830, 1840, 1850, i860. From Tenth Census . . 369
CHAPTER XII
INLAND COMMERCE AND INTERNAL IMPROVEMENTS, 1816-1S60
I. Stage Coach Travel
A. Traveling by Stage Coach in Virginia, 1835. By C. A. Murray 376
B. Plight of a Traveler in the South, 1835. By Harriet Martineau. . 377
n. Early Navigation of the Western Rivers
Primitive Methods, 1832. By Timothy Flint 379
HI. Effects of the Steamboat on Inland Commerce
( iianges in Rates and Speed, 1816-1856. By Thomas P. Kettell 381
IV. Federal Aid for Internal Improvements
A. Internal Improvements and the National Defense, 18 ig. By John
C. Calhoun 385
B. V etc of the May sville Road Bill, J 8 30. By Andrew Jackson 388
V. Effects of the Erie Canal
Development of Internal Improvements in the West, 1825-1850. By H.
V. Poor 390
VI. Early Development of Railroads
Location and Construction, 1826-1850. By Thomas P. Kettell 393
VII. Railroadk versus Canals
A. Arguments for Railroads in 18^. From CongressiotuU Committee
Report 396
CONTENTS xix
B. Arguments for Canals in 1830. From Congressional Committee
Report 400
C. Canals and Railroads — Rates and Expense of Maintenance, 18 jj;.
From Assembly (N. Y.) Documents -. 401
VIII. Progress and Development of Railroads
During the Decade, 18 50-1860. From Eighth Census 404
IX. Inland Water Commerce
Development, 1816-1852. By Israel D. Andrews 406
CHAPTER XIII
FOREIGN COMMERCE, 1800-1860
I. Foreign Commerce prior to i860
A. Character and Extent of Foreign Commerce, 1800-1860. By Thomas
P. Kettell 413
B. Commerce and Legislation, 1806-18 54. By J. S. Romans 418
11. Foreign Commerce of the North and South Compared
A. Predominance of the South in the Export Trade, 1800-1850. By
Ezra C. Seaman 421
B. Small Import Trade of the South in 1855. By Thomas H.Benton. . 422
HI. Movement of Foreign Commerce
Balance of Trade, 1821-1850. By Ezra C. Seaman 424
IV. Ocean Steam Navigation
Development between 1818 and 1840. From Hunfs Merchants^
Magazine 427
V. The Carrying Trade
The Use of American and Foreign Vessels, 1 821-1860. From Report
of Commissioner of Navigation 432
VI. The Foreign Commerce of Important Ports
A. Foreign Commerce of the City of New York in 185Q. From Annual
Report of the Chamber of Commerce .^ 433
B. Foreign Trade of Boston from 1845 to 18 5g. From Annual Report
of the Boston Board of Trade 435
C. A View of the New Orleans Levee in 18 jg. By J. S. Buckingham 436
VII. Important Export Crops
A. Exportation of Cotton for Various Years from 1821 to i860. From
Treasury Report 438
B. American Wheat and the World Crop 1 846-1 860. From Hunt's
Merchants' Magazine 43^
C. Exportation of Indian Corn, 1 820-1 860. By Charles L. Flint 442
XX CONTENTS
CHAPTER XIV
PUBUC LANDS AND AGRICULTURE, 1820-1860
I. The Pubuc Domain
Extent and Importance, 1832. By Henry Clay 446
II. The Public Lands and Wages
A. Secretary Walker on the Public Lands, 1845. From Treasury
Report 455
B. Ease of Acquisition of Public Lands in i8j2. From American
Quarterly Review 457
III. Speculation in Public Lands
A. Land Speculation, 1840. By Richard Hildreth 458
B. A View of Western Specidation before the Civil War. By D. W.
Mitchell 450
C. Early Land Speculation in Illinois, 1830-1840. By Thomas Ford 461
D. Latui Specidation in Chicago in 1835. By Harriet Martineau. . . . 462
rV. English and American Agriculture Compared
Superiority of American Agriculture, 1833. By Patrick Shirref 464
V. Agricultural Education and Machinery
Improvements before i860. From Report of Commission of Agriculture 467
VI. Views on Agriculture
A. Southern and Northern Agriculture Compared, 1840, 1850, i860.
From Hunt's Merchants' Magazine 47^
B. Agriculture about i860. From Bacon's Handbook of America 480
CHAPTER XV
CURRENCY, BANKING, AND STATE DEBTS, 1791-1860
I. The First United States Bank
A. Hamilton's Views on the Bank, 17 go. By Alexander Hamilton 485
B. Public and Private Finances after the Dissolution of the Bank, 1812-
1815. By Richard Hildreth 49^
n. Second United States Bank
A. Necessity of a United SUUes Bank after the War of 1S12. From
Legislative and Documentary History of the Bank of the United
Stales 493
B. President Jackson's Veto of the Bank Bill in 1832. By Andrew
Jackson . 496
in. The Panic of 1837 and its Effects
A. President Van Buren on the Panic of 1837. By Martin Van Buren 499
B. EfeOs of the Panic on Banking, 1837-1839. By Richard Hildreth . . 501
C. Afgumenls for an Independent Treasury and "Hard Money,"
1845. By Robert J. Woli-rr 503
CONTENTS xxi
IV. Systems of Banking in the United States before i860
A. Early State Banking in the West 1821-1831. By Thomas Ford 507
B. Banking in New York and Massachusetts, 181J-1860. By A. S.
Bolles 508
C. Conditions of Banking in i860. From Eighth Census 512
V. Currency and Coinage
A. Currencies and their Movements, 1852. By Ezra C. Seaman. . . 516
B. Early Coinage, 1^^1-1840. From Muni's Merchants' Magazine. . 520
VI. State Debts
Amount and Character in 1852. From Report of Commissioner of
Patents 522
CHAPTER XVI
POPULATION AND LABOR, 1 820-1860
I. Condition of the American Laborer
A. Prosperity of the American Laborer, 1836. By C. A. Murray . . 524
B. Unfavorable View of American Labor, 1843. From Documentary
History of American Lndustrial Society 525
II. Improvement in Manufactures
Labor-saving Machinery and the Demand for Labor, 1832. From
American Quarterly Review 528
III. The Factory System
A. Conditions at Waltham and Lynn, 1835. By Harriet Martineau . . . 529
B. Superiority of the Operatives, 1833. By Patrick Shirrejf 531
C. Home Life of the Mill Operatives, 1834. By C. R. Weld 532
D. Hours of Labor, 1843. From Documentary History of American
Industrial Society 534
E. An Unfriendly View, 1846. From Documentary History of
American Industrial Society 535
IV. Experiments in Communism
A. The Rappites, 1840. By J. S. Buckingham .* 537
B. The Owenites at New Harmony, 1830. By S. A. Ferrall 539
C. Description of a Phalanx, 1849. From Documentary History of
American Industrial Society . 541
V. Character of the People — North and South
The Views' of an Englishman with Southern Tendencies, i860. By
D. W. Mitchell 542
VI. Population
Distribution in i860. From Eighth Census 545
VII. Immigration
Extent and Character, 1820-1860. From Eighth Census 550
xxii CONTENTS
CHAPTER XVII
SLAVERY AND THE SOUTH, 182S-1860
I. The Economics of Slave Labor
A. A Philosophic View of Slave Labor, i860. By J. E. Cairnes 559
B. Cheapness of Slave Labor, 18^2. By C. F. McCay 564
C. Radical View on the Efficiency of Slavery, i860. By S. M. Wolfe 567
D. Cheapness of Free Labor, 1823. By Adam Hodgson 571
E. Heavy Expense of Slave Labor, 18 jg. By J. S. Buckingham 574
F. Radical Vi&w on the Inefficiency of Slave Labor, i860. By H. R.
Helper 576
U. Southern Agriculture
An Unfavorable View, i860. From Report of Commissioner of Patents 578
in. Plantation Management
A. Instructions of a Mississippi Planter to his Overseer, 1857. From
Documentary History of American Industrial Society 582
B. Management of Slaves on a Cotton Plantation, 1852. From De
Bow^s Ifulustrial Resources 585
C. Description of a Southern Rice PlankUion, 18 jg. By J. S. Buck-
ingham 590
D. The System of Task Work, 1 8s4. By F. L. Olmsted 592
IV. The Internal Slave Trade
The Movement of Slaves toward the South, 1840-1860. By J. E.
Cairnes 595
CHAPTER XVIII
DEVELOPMENT OF AGRICULTURE, 1860-1915
I. Foreign Trade in Agricultural Products
Extent and Character, 1 878-1 91 2. From Annual Report of Depart-
ment of Agriculture 598
IT. Land Tenure in the United States
A. Land Tenure in 1880. From Tenth Census 601
B. Farm Tenancy in the South, 1902. From Report of the Industrial
Commission 605
m. ACBXCULTUKE AND LaBOR
A. Workers in Agriculture, 1850-igio. Adapted from Census Reports 608
B. Foreigners in American Agriculture, i8gg. From Report of Indus-
tnal Commission .60S
IV. Prockem in Agriculture
A. Land Values, Equipment^ and Number of Farms, 1850-1900.
From Twelfth Cwsus . . 613
CONTENTS xxiii
B. Importance of Irrigation, i8gg. From Report of hidustrial Com-
mission 622
C. Dry Farming, I go 5. From Yearbook of Department of Agriculture 624
V. Southern Agriculture
Tenancy, Size of Farms and Character of Crops, 1850-igio. From
Thirteenth Census 627
VI. Farms and Farm Property and Crops
A. General View, igio. From Thirteenth Census 629
B. Distribution of Leading Crops, I gog. From Thirteenth Census ... . 636
VII. The Public Domain
Extent and Character, i8g8. From Yearbook of Department of
Agriculture 640
CHAPTER XIX
COMMERCE, TRANSPORTATION, AND COMMUNICATION, 1860-igis
I. Internal and Foreign Commerce
A. Extent and Growth, 1850-igog. From Report of National Con-
servation Commission 644
B. Character of the Internal Trade, i8gg. From Report of Industrial
Commission 646
II. The Merchant Marine
A. American and Foreign Vessels in the Carrying Trade of the United
States, 1860-igio. From Report of the Commissioner of Naviga-
tion 651
B. American Vessels Engaged in Commerce, i86o-igi4. From
Statistical Abstract 652
C. President McKinley on the Merchant Marine, i8gg. From Rich-
ardson's Messages and Papers of the Presidents 653
D. A Plea for Ship Subsidy, igoi. By Theodore Roosevelt 654
III. Commerce on the Great Lakes
A. Interlake and Local Traffic, igoo. From Report of Industrial
Commission 655
B. Recent Development, i8go-igog. From Report of National Con-
servation Commission 657
IV. Rail and River Traffic
A. Growth of Railroad Systems to igoo. From Report of Industrial
Commission 659
B. Freight Rates, 1 870-1 goo. From Report of Industrial Commission. . 662
C. Decline of the Mississippi River Trade after i860. By F. H. Dixon 667
D. The Future of Rail and Water Transportation. By James J. Hill 675
V. Communication
A. Development of Telegraph and Telephone Systems, i844-igo7.
From Special Report of the Census 680
B. The Postal System, igii. From Report of Postmaster General 682
xxiv CONTENTS
CHAPTER XX
FINANCIAL HISTORY, MONEY AND BANKING, 1860-1915
I. Financing the War
A. ExtaU and Character of Government Receipts and Expenditures,
j86o. From Treasury Report. - 687
B. Money Cost of the Civil War, 1869. By David A. Wells 689
n. The Greenbacks
A. Qtiantity and Nature of the Greenback Issues, 1864. By William P.
Fessenden 691
B. The Greenback Situation as seen by an Englishman, 1865. By
Goldwin Smith 693
C. Fluctuations in the Value of Greenbacks, 1864-1878. From
Report of the Comptroller of the Currency 696
D. Resumption of Specie Payments, 1879. By John Sherman 696
m. The National Banking System
A. Inadequacy of State Banking, 186 j. By John Sherman 700
B. Superiority of the National Banking System, 1868. From Bankers^
Magazine 704
C. Development of Banking, 1879-1909. By George E. Barnett 707
D. Expected Benefits of the Federal Reserve Act, 191 4. By John
Skelton Williams 709
rV. The Silver Question
A. The ''Crime of 'yj." By John P. Jones 711
B. The Coinage Act of 1 87 J Defended. By John Sherman 714
C. Operation of the Bland-Allison Silver Purchase Act, 1 878-1 889.
From Treasury Report 717
D. Effect of the Sherman Silver Purchase Act on the Supply of Money,
1893. By John G. Carlisle 719
E. A Plea for the Free Coinage of Silver, 1896. By W. J. Bryan. ... 722
V. The Monetary Stock
.\. The Trade Dollar, 1873-1878. From the Commercial and Financial
Chronicle 725
B. Kinds and Amounts of Money in Circulation, 1860-1893. By
John G. Carlisle. . . 726
VI. Panics and Crises
A. The Panic of 1873. By John Jay Knox .729
B. The Financial Crisis of 1884. By Henry II . Lannon 732
C. The Panic of 1907. From Report of the Comptroller of the
Currency 734
CONTENTS XXV
CHAPTER XXI
MANUFACTURES, TARIFF, AND TRUSTS, 1860-1915
I. Manufactures
A. Conditions of Industrial Progress, 1901. From Report of Industrial
Commission 738
B. Growth of Manufactures, 18 50-1 880. From Tenth Census' 739
C. Manufactures, 1 850-1 910. From Thirteenth Census 744
D. Rank of the United States as a Manufacturer of Cotton, 1830-1905.
From Census of Manufactures 746
E. Cotton Manufactures, 1 860-1 880. From Tenth Census 749
F. Growth of the Cotton Manufactures, 1860-1910. From Thirteenth
Census 750
G. Cotton Manufactures in the South, 1890-1900. From Twelfth
Census 750
H. The Iron and Steel Industry, 1880. From Tenth Census 752
I. The Iron and Steel hidustry, 1870-igoo. From Twelfth Census. . . 754
II. Tariff
A. Tariff Changes, 1860-1882. By E. H. Roberts 756
B. Reduction of the Tariff Urged, 18S2. By the Tariff Commission. . . 757
C. Changes in the Tariff, 1883-1897. From Senate and House Reports . 758
D. Tariff Act of 1909. From Congressional Record 763
E. Tariff Act of 191 3. By the Committee of Ways and Means 765
III. Trusts
A. The Tendency to Consolidation, 1901. From Report of hidustrial
Commission 768
B. The Causes of Consolidation, 1901. By the Commissioner of
Corporations 771
C. Alleged Advantages of Combination, 1897. From Report of Joint
Committee of New York Legislature 772
D. Effects of hultistrial Combinations upon Prices and Wages, 1900.
By J. W. Jenks 774
CHAPTER XXII
POPULATION AND LABOR, 1 860-1 91 5
I. Population
A. Growth of Population, 17 90-1 910. From Thirteenth Census 777
B. The Increase of Population, 1900. By W. F. Willcox 777
C. The Westward Movement, 1880. From Tenth Census 779
D. Growth of Cities, 1790-1880. From Tenth Census 780
E. Urban Concentration, 1 880-1 910. From Thirteenth Census 781
II. Immigration
A. Immigration, 1882-1910. From Report of Immigration Com-
mission 783
xxvi CONTENTS
B. Immigration Legislation^ 1882-igio. From Report of Immigra-
tion Commission 790
m. Labor Conditions
A. General Conditions of Labor, igoo. From Report of Industrial
Commission 792
B. National Labor Organizations, igoj. From Report of Industrial
Commission 798
C. Membership of Trade Unions in the United States, igoi. From
Report of Industrial Commission 800
D. Membership of American Federation of Labor, iSgy-igi^. By
Samuel Gompers 800
E. Labor Legislation, 1903. By G. A. Weber 801
F. Workmen's Compensation, igij. From Report of United States
Bureau of Labor Statistics 805
G. The Federal Compensation Act, igo8. From Report of Department
of Commerce and Labor 806
H. Wages and Prices, 1 870-1 goi. From Report of Industrial Com-
mission 808
I. Higher Cost of Living, igio. From Senate Investigation of Wages
and Prices 810
J. A Nation at Work, 1880. From Tenth Census 811
CHAPTER XXIII
ECONOMIC PROGRESS, 1860-igis
I. Wealth of the People of the United States
National Wealth, i8jo-igi2. From Census Btdlelin 813
II. Distribution of Wealth
A. Labor's Share in the Net Product of Industry, 1850-1880. From
Report Massachusetts Bureau of Statistics of Labor 815
B. Profits and Wages, i8go-jgoo. From Report of Industrial Com-
mission 817
C. The Growth of Large Fortunes, igiS- From Report of Commission
on Industrial Relations 820
D. Distribution of the National Income, 1 850-1 gio. By W. I. King. 822
III. How the National Wealth is Expended
A. Advance in the Statidard of Living, igio. From Report of Com-
mission on Cost of Living 827
B. How Much is Enough? 1907. By Louise B. More. . . . 829
C. The Needs of a Self-supporting Woman, 1914. From Report of
Minimum Wage Commission 83 1
D. Making Ends Meet, 1903. By the Commissioner of Labor 832
E. Extravagance and Waste, tqjo. From Report of Commission on
Cost of Living ... 834
IV. Saving and Thrift
A. Savings in the United States^ 186J-IQ13. By the Comptroller of
the Currency 838
B. Building and Loan Associations, i8qs. By the Commissioner of
Labor 840
CONTENTS xxvii
V. Social Well-being
A. Improvement of Conditions during the Nineteenth Century, 1885.
From Report Massachusetts Bureau of Statistics of Labor 842
B. Condition of Workers, 1902. By A . Mosely 846
VI. Conservation
A. Conservation of Natural Resources, 1909. From Report of National
Conservation Commission 848
B. National Vitality: its Wastes and Conservation, 1909. From Report
of National Conservation Commission 851
Index 855
0
Readings in the Economic
History of the United States
CHAPTER I
EXPLORATION AND COLONIZATION, 158^-1774
I. Methods of Planting a Colony
A. The Cost of Colonizing, 1648 ^
The actual work of colonizing America was undertaken by companies chartered
for this purpose by the crown, or by wealthy individuals on their own account who
were proprietors of the lands granted them. In either case there was usually
hope and expectation of a financial return from the venture. The "adventurers"
who financed the schemes generally contributed their money as an investment or
speculation. In this description of the new country there are shrewdly intermingled
(hrections to prospective adventurers, a statement of the terms upon which colonists
will be received, and an optimistic picture of the returns to be secured.
Each Adventurer of twenty or fifty men must provide household
necessaries, as irons and chains for a draw-bridge, two Mares or
Horses to bred or ride on. Pots, Pans, Dishes, Iron for a Cart and
Plow, Chains, Sithes, and Sickles, Nets, Lines, and Hooks. A sail
for a fishing Shallop of three tun, and Hemp to employ his people in
making them, as with hair, and canvas for quilts, as well on ship-
board as demurring at the sea port, as with locks, keys, bolts, and
glasse casements for his house. And generally fit Implements for
the work or trade he intends.
For trade with the Indians, buy Dutch or Welch rugged cloth,
seven quarters broad, a violet blew or red, at four or five shillings a
yard, small hooks and fishing lines, Morris bels, Jewes-harps, Combes,
trading knives. Hatchets, Axes, Hoes, they will bring you Venison,
* A Description of the Province of New Albion. And a Direction for Adventurers
with small stock to get two for one, and good land freely. ... By Beauchamp Plan-
taganet (1648). In Force, Tracts and Other Papers (Washington, 1838), II, no.
vii, 31-35-
2 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
Turkeys, and Fowles, Flesh, &c. for a pennyworth of com at twelve
pence a bushell.
Provisions for each man, and the charge from London.
1. Canvas, or linnen clothes, Shooes, Hats, &c. costing here
foure pounds for two men to buy Cows, Goats, and Hogs in Virginia^
which there yeeld sixe pound, and will buy one Cow, and Oxe, two
Goats two Sowes, which one each man comes to 2I. o. o.
2. Fraight for a Passenger, and his half Tun of provisions and
Tooles. 1 1. 10. o.
3. Victuals till his own stock and crop maintain him for seven
moneths. 3 1. 10. o.
That is. Pease, Oatmeal and Aquavite, 7s. five bushels of Meal,
of which to be baked into Biskets, and five bushels of Malt, some
must be ground and brewed for the voyage, both 1 1. 10 s. a hundred
of Beefe, and Pork, 1 1. 2 s. two bushels of roots, 2 s. salt fish, 2 s.
Cask to carry provision 5 s. five pound of Butter 2 s.
4. One Hogshead of eares of Com Garden seeds. Hemp, and
linseed with husk and some Rice from Virginia. o. 16. o.
5. Armes (viz.) a Sword, Calliver five foot long, or long Pistoll,
Pikehead: six pound of powder, ten pound of shot, halfe an old
slight Armour that is, two to one Armour o. 19. o.
6. Tools, a Spade, Axe, and Shovell, 5 s. Iron and Steel to make
and mend more, and two hundred of nails, 5 s. o. 10. o.
7. Guns and Powder for the Fort, that is to every fifty foure
Murtherers,*** a barell of powder 4 1. 10 s. that is to each man 5 s.
8. A Bed and sheets of Canvas, to be filled with Huls, each man
a Rug 15 s.
Sum totally 10 1. 5. o.
CHAP. VI.
Here by bringing good Labourers, and Tradesmen, the provident
planters may doe well by giving shares or double wages, when each
man may earn his fi\'c, nay sLxe shillmgs a day in Tobacco, Flaxe,
Rice. . . .
Passage and diet of a man, his bedding and chest thither,
5I. o. o.
Bedding will cost 15 s. drams, fruit and spice i. 0.0.
In goods to buy a Cow, and stock each man here 2. 0.0.
Arms, Ammunition, and Tools, each man 2. 0.0.
JSum Totall 10. o. o.
EXPLORATION AND COLONIZATION 3
All Adventurers of 500L to bring fifty men shall have 5000 acres,
and a manor with Royalties, at 5 s. rent, and whosoever is willing
so to transport himself or servant at 10 1. a man, shall for each man
have 100 acres freely granted forever, and at [manuscript illegible]
may be instructed how in a moneth
to passe, and in 20 days to get fit servants and artificers for wages,
diet, and clothes, and apprentices according to the 3 Statutes 5 Eliz.
All which after 5 years service, are to have 30 acres of free land,
and some stock, and bee free-holders.
B. Articles of Agreement of Plymouth Plantation, 1620 ^
In the "Articles of Agreement of Plymouth Plantation" we have a good illus-
tration of the terms upon which tjie colonists — who did the actual work of set-
tlement and development and upon whose efforts depended the financial success
of the venture — agreed to apply their time and labor and divide the profits. In
the case of the Plymouth Company the capital necessary to finance the under-
taking was to be furnished by the adventurers and all property to be put into a
common stock until a final division should take place.
An^: 1620. July i.
1. The adventurers & planters doe agree, that every person that
goeth being aged 16. years & upward, be rated at 10^*., and ten pounds
to be accounted a single share.
2. That he that goeth in person, and furnisheth him selfe out with
10^'. either in money or other provissions, be accounted as haveing
2o^\ in stock, and in y® devission shall receive a double share.
3. The persons transported & y® adventurers shall continue their
joynt stock & partnership togeather, y® space of 7. years, (excepte
some unexpected impedimente doe cause y® whole company to agree
otherwise,) during which time, all profits & benifits that are gott by
trade, traffick, trucking, working, fishing, or any other means of
any person or persons, remaine still in y® comone stock untill y®
division.
4. That at their coming ther, they chose out such a number of
fitt persons, as may furnish their ships and boats for fishing upon y®
sea; imploying the rest in their severall faculties upon y® land; as
building houses, tilling, and planting y® ground, & makeing shuch
comodities as shall be most usefuU for y® collonie.
5. That at y® end of y® 7. years, y^ capitall & profits, viz. the houses,
^ William Bradford, History of the Plimouth Plantation, from the original
manuscript (Boston, 1900), pp. 56-58.
4 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
lands, goods and chatles, be equally devided betwixte y® adventurers,
and planters; w** done, every man shall be free from other of them
of any debt or detrimente concerning this adventure.
6. Whosoever cometh to y® colonie herafter, or putteth any into
y® stock, shall at the ende of y® 7. years be alowed proportionally to
y® time of his so doing.
7. He that shall carie his wife & children, or servants, shall be
alowed for everie person now aged 16. years & upward, a single share
in y* devision, or if he provid them necessaries, a duble share, or if
they be between 10. year old and 16., then 2. of them to be reconed
for a person, both in trasportation and devision.
8. That such children as now goe, & are under y*' age of ten years,
have noe other shar in y® devision, but 50. acers of unmanured land.
9. That such persons as die before y^ 7. years be expired, their
executors to have their parte or sharr at y® devision, proportionably
to y^ time of their life in y® coUonie.
10. That all such persons as are of this coUonie, are to have
their meate, drink, apparell, and all provissions out of y® coinon
stock & goods of y^ said coUonie.
C. Disadvantages of a Common Store, 1620 ^
The plan of a common stock did not work any better in the Plymouth Planta-
tion than it had in Virginia, but resulted in waste and lack of industry. In the
first three years there resulted much suffering, which Governor Bradford attributed
to this community of goods and undertook to correct by allotting to each man a
separate plot of ground for his own use. Bradford was the first governor of
Plymouth, and wrote a valuable history of the colony during the first twenty-five
years of its existence.
Anno Dom: 1623
It may be thought Strang that these people should fall to these
extremities in so short a time, being left competently provided when
y* ship left them, and had an addition by that moyetie of corn that
was got by trade, besids much they gott of y'" Indans wher they lived,
by one means & other. It must needs be their great disorder, for they
spent excessively whilst they had, or could get it; and, it may be,
wasted parte away among y® Indeans (for he y* was their cheef was
taxed by some amongst them for keeping Indean women, how truly
I know not). And after they begane to come into wants, many sould
away their cloathes and bed coverings; others (so base were they)
» William Bradford, History of the PlimotOh Plantation (Boston, 1900),
15^x57, 162-164.
EXPLORATION AND COLONIZATION, 5
became servants to y^ Indeans, and would cutt them woode & fetch
them water, for a cap full of corne; others fell to plaine stealing,
both night & day, from y® Indeans, of which they greevosly complained.
In y® end, they came to that misery, that some starved & dyed with
could & hunger. . . .
All this whille no supply was heard of, neither knew they when
they might expecte any. So they begane to thinke how they might
raise as much corne as they could, and obtaine a beter crope then they
had done, that they might not still thus languish in miserie. At
length, after much debate of things, the Gov'" (with y® advice of y®
cheefest amongest them) gave way that they should set corne every
man for his owne perticuler, and in that regard trust to them selves;
in all other things to goe on in y® generall way as before. And so
assigned to every family a parcell of land, according to the propor-
tion of their number for that end, only for present use (but made no
devission for inheritance), and ranged all boys & youth under some
familie. This had very good success; for it made all hands very indus-
trious, so as much more corne was planted then other waise would
have bene by any means y® Gov"" or any other could use, and saved
him a great deall of trouble, and gave farr better contente. The
women now wente willingly into y® feild, and tooke their litle-ons
with them to set corne, which before would aledg weaknes, and
inabilitie; whom to have compelled would have bene thought great
tiranie and oppression.
The experience that was had in this comone course and condition,
tried sundrie years, and that amongst godly and sober men, may well
evince the vanitie of that conceite of Platos & other ancients, ap-
plauded by some of_later times; — that y® taking away of propertie,
and bringing in comunitie into a comone wealth, would make them
happy and fiorishing; as if they were wiser then God. For this
comunitie (so farr as it was) was found to breed much confusion &
discontent, and retard much imploymet that would have been to
their benefite and conforte. /For y^ youn-men that were most able
and fitte for labour & service did repine that they should spend
their time & streingth to worke for other mens wives and children,
without any recompence. The strong, or man of parts, had no more
in devission of victails & cloaths, then he that was weake and not
able to doe a quarter y® other could; this was thought injuestice.
The aged and graver men to be ranked and equaUsed in labours,
and victails, cloaths, &c., with y^ meaner & yonger sorte, thought
it some indignite & disrespect unto them. And for mens wives to
6 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
be commanded to doe servise for other men, as dresing their meate,
washing their cloaths, &c., they deemd it a kind of slaverie, neither
could many husbands well brooke it./ Upon y® poynte all being to
have alike, and all to doe alike, they thought them selves in y® like
condition, and one as good as another; and so, if it did not cut of
those relations that God hath set amongest men, yet it did at least
much diminish and take of y^'mutuall respects that should be preserved
amongst them. And would have bene worse if they had been men of
another condition. Let none objecte this is men's corruption, and
nothing to y* course it selfe. I answer, seeing all men have this cor-
ruption in them, God in his wisdome saw another course fiter for them.
n. Suggestions to .Colonists
A. The Advantages of Colonies ^ i5^3^
Englishmen were slow to appreciate the advantages that would accrue to their
country from the establishment of colonies in the New World. But some of the
earlier adventurers, Uke Drake, Frobisher, Gilbert, and Raleigh, were ahve to the
benefits that would follow from the planting of colonies in the New World, and
endeavored to f)ersuade the government to take active measures to occupy the
lands discovered and described by them. In the following extract Sir Humphrey
Gilbert enumerates various advantages that England could derive from colonies.
... the fourth chapter sheweth how that the trade, traffic and
planting in these countries is likely to prove very profitable and
beneficial generally to the whole realm. It is very certain that the
greatest jewel of this realm and the chieftest strength and force of
the same, for defence or offence in martial matter and manner is the
multitude of ships, masters, and mariners ready to assist the most
stately and royal navy of her Majesty, which by reason of this voyage
shall have both increase and maintenance. And it is well known
that in sundry places of this realm ships have been built and set
forth of late days for the trade of fishing only; yet, notwithstanding,
the fish which is taken and brought into England by the English
navy of fishermen will not suffice for the expense of this realm four
months, if there were none else brought of strangers. And the
chiefest cause why our English men do not go so far westerly as the
wpwi^l fishing places do lie, both for plenty and greatness of fish,
• A Inu Rgpcrt of Uu hit Discoveries and Possession Taken in the Right of
Iht Cfmm of Emghitd of the Neufoundland. By Sir Humphrey Gilbert, 1 583. In
Tkt PH^pd NofigatioHs Voyages Traffiques & Discoveries of the English Nation.
By Ucblid Hakluyt (Glaigow, 100^). Ill, 167-81.
EXPLORATION AND COLONIZATION 7
is for that they have no succour and known safe harbour in those parts.
But if our nation were once planted there or thereabouts, whereas
they now fish for but two months in the year, they might then fish
for so long as pleased themselves . . . which being brought to pass
shall increase the number of our ships and mariners. . . .
Moreover, it is well known that all savages . . . will take
marvellous delight in any garment, be it ever so simple, as a shirt, a
blue, a yellow, red, or green cotton cassock, a cap, or such like, and
will take incredible pains for such a trifle . . . which being so,
what vent for our English cloths will thereby ensue, and how great
benefit to all such persons and artificers, whose names are quoted in
the margin, I leave to such as are discreet. . . .
To what end need I endeavor myself by arguments to prove that
by this voyage our navy and navigation shall be enlarged, when as
there needeth none other reason than the manifest and late example
of the near neighbors to this realm, the Kings of Spain and Portugal,
who, since the first discovery of the Indies, have not only mightily en-
larged their dominions, greatly enriched themselves and their subjects,
but have also, by just account, trebled the number of their ships, mas-
ters and mariners, a matter of no small moment and importance?
Besides this, it will prove a general benefit unto our country, that,
through this occasion, not only a great number of men which do live
idly at home, and are burdenous, chargeable, and unprofitable to
this realm, shall hereby be set on work, but also children of twelve
or fourteen years of age, or under, may be kept from idleness, in making
of a thousand kinds of trifling things, which will be good merchandise
for that country. And, moreover, our idle women (which the realm
may well spare) shall also be employed on plucking, drying, and sorting
of feathers, in pulling, beating, and working of hemp, and in gathering
of cotton, and divers things right necessary for dyeing. All which
things are to be found in those countries most plentifully. And the
men may employ themselves in dragging for pearl, working for mines,
and in matters of husbandry, and likewise in hunting the whale for
trane, and making casks to put the same in, besides in fishing for cod,
salmon, and herring, drying, salting, and barrelling the same, and
felling of trees, hewing and sawing of them, g,nd such like work, meet
for those persons that are no men of art or science.
Many other things may be found to the great relief and good em-
ployment of no small number of the natural subjects of this realm,
which do now live here idly, to the common annoy of the whole
State. Neither may I here omit the great hope and likelihood of a
RE.\DINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
beyond the Grand Bay into the South Seas, confirmed by
sundry authors to be found leading to Cataia, the Moluccas and
Spiceries, whereby may ensue as general a benefit to the realm, or
greater than hath yet been spoken of, without either such charges or
other inconveniences, as, by the tedious tract of time and peril, which
the ordinary passage to those parts at this day doth minister. . . .
I must now, according to my promise, show forth some probable
reasons that the adventurers in this journey are to take particular
profit by the same. It is, therefore, convenient that I do divide the
adventurers into two sorts, the noblemen and gentlemen by them-
selves, and the merchants by themselves. For, as I do hear, it is
meant that there shall be one society of the noblemen and gentlemen,
and another society of the merchants; and yet not so divided, but
that each society may freely and frankly trade and traffic one with
the other.
And first to bend my speech to the noblemen and gentlemen, who
do chiefly seek a temperate climate, wholesome air, fertile soil, and a
strong place by nature whereupon they may fortify, and there either
plant themselves or such other persons as they shall think good to
send to be lords of that place and country: — To them I say that all
these things are very easy to be found within the degrees of 30 and 60
aforesaid, either by south or north, both in the continent and in
islands thereunto adjoining, at their choice . . . and in the whole
tract of that land, by the. description of as many as have been there,
great plenty of mineral matter of all sorts, and in very many places
both stones of price, pearl and chrystal, and great store of beasts,
birds, and fowls, both for pleasure and necessary use of man are to be
found. . . .
And now for the better contemplation and satisfaction of such
worshipful, honest-minded and well-disposed merchants as have a
desire to the furtherance of every good and commendable action, I
will first say unto them, as I have done before to the noblemen and
gentlemen, that within the degrees aforesaid is doubtless to be found
the moat wholesome and best temperature of air, fertility of soil, and
every other commodity or merchandise, for the which, with no small
peril, we do travel into Barbary, Spain, Portugal, France, Italy,
Muscovy and Eastland, and yet to the end my arguments shall not
•it4)gethef stand upon likelihoods and presumptions, I say that such
pcraoQf as have discovered and travelled those parts do testify that
they have found in those countries all these things following, namely:
— fa \ht of beasu, birds, fishes, trees, mint r N rtr ] . . .
EXPLORATION AND COLONIZATION 9
The sixth chapter sheweth that the traffic and planting in those
countries shall be unto the savages themselves very beneficial and
gainful. ...
. . . First and chiefly, in respect of the most happy and glad-
some tidings of the most glorious gospel of our Saviour Jesus Christ,
whereby they may be brought from falsehood to truth, from darkness
to light, from the highway of death to the path of life, from super-
stitious idolatry to sincere Christianity, from the devil to Christ,
from hell to heaven. And if in respect of all the commodities they
can yield us (were they many more) that they should receive but
this only benefit of Christianity, they were more than fully
recompensed. . . .
B. Advice to Colonists to New England, 162 1 *
The picture of conditions in the colony at Plymouth is as valuable to us today
as the advice was then to the intending colonist. Winslow was one of the leading
men in the colony and later became governor.
You shall understand that in this little time that a few of us have
been here, we have built seven dwelling-houses and four for the use
of the plantation, and have made preparation for divers others. We
set the last spring some twenty acres of Indian corn, and sowed
some six acres of barley and pease; and according to the manner of
the Indians, we manured our ground with herrings, or rather shads,
which we have in great abundance, and take with great ease at our
doors. Our corn did prove well; and, God be praised, we had a good
increase of Indian corn, and our barley indifferent good, but our
pease not worth the gathering, for we feared they were too late sown.
They came up very well, and blossomed; but the sun parched them
in the blossom. . . .
For the temper of the air here, it agreeth well with that in England;
and if there be any difference at all, this is somewhat hotter in summer.
Some think it to be colder in winter; but I cannot out of experience
so say. The air is very clear and not foggy, as hath been reported.
I never in my life remember a more seasonable year than we have
here enjoyed; and if we have once but kine, horses, and sheep, I
make no question but men might live as contented here as in any part
of the world. For fish and fowl, we have great abundance. Fresh
cod in the summer is but coarse meat with us. Our bay is full of
^ Relation or lournall, etc. By Edward Winslow (London, 1622). In Chroni'
cles of Pilgrim Fathers. By Alexander Yoimg (Boston, 1841), 230-8, passim.
,o READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
lobsters all the summer, and affordeth variety of other fish. In
September we can take a hogshead of eels in a night, with small
labor, and can dig them out of their beds all the winter. We have
muscles and othus [others?] at our doors. Oysters we have none near,
but we can have them brought by the Indians when we will. All the
spring-time the earth sendeth forth naturally very good sallet herbs.
Here are grapes, white and red, and very sweet and strong also;
strawberries, gooseberries, raspas, &c.; plums of three sorts, white,
black, and red, being almost as good as a damson; abundance of
roses, white, red, and damask; single, but very sweet indeed. The
country wanteth only industrious men to employ; for it would
grie\'e your hearts if, as I, you had seen so many miles together by
goodly rivers uninhabited; and withal, to consider those parts of
the world wherein you live to be even greatly burthened with abun-
dance of people. These things I thought good to let you understand,
being the truth of things- as near as I could experimentally take
knowledge of, and that you might on our behalf give God thanks,
who hath dealt so favorably with us. . . .
Now because I expect your coming unto us, with other of our
friends, whose company we much desire, I thought good to advertise
you of a few things needful. Be careful to have a very good bread-
room to put your biscuits in. Let your cask for beer and water
be iron-bound, for the first tire, if not more. Let not your meat be
dry-salted ; none can better do it than the sailors. Let your meal be
so hard trod in your cask that you shall need an adz or hatchet to
work it out with. Trust not too much on us for corn at this time,
for by reason of this last company that came, depending wholly upon
lis, we shall have little enough till harvest. Be careful to come by
tome of your meal to spend by the way; it will much refresh you.
Build your cabins as open as you can, and bring good store of clothes
and bedding with you. Bring every man a musket or fowling piece.
Let your piece be long in the barrel, and fear not the weight of it,
for most of our shooting is from stands. Bring juice of lemons, and
take it fasting; it is of good use. For hot waters, aniseed water is
tbe best; but use it sparingly. If you bring anything for comfort
io the country, butter or sallet oil, or both, is very good. Our
Indian com, even the coarsest, maketh as pleasant meat as rice;
therefore spare that, unless to spend by the way. Bring paper and
Umeed oil for your windows, with cotton yarn for your lami)s. Let
your shot be most for big fowls, and bring store of powder and shot.
I foriwar further to write for the present, hoping to see you by the
EXPLORATION AND COLONIZATION ii
next return. So I take my leave, commending you to the Lord for
a safe conduct unto us, resting in him.
Your loving friend,
E. W.
Plymouth, in New England, this nth of December, 162 1.
C. Information respecting Land in New Netherlands 1650^
The colonization of New Netherland by the Dutch proceeded rather more
slowly than that of the neighboring colonies, and various methods were followed
by the States General to hasten its development. The followmg extract is from a
report to them by their secretary on the conditions of settlement.
Information relative to taking up land in New Netherland, in
the form of Colonies or private bouweries. Delivered in
by Secretary van Tienhoven, on the 4^^ of March, 1650. . . .
Boors and others who are obliged to work at first in Colonies ought
to sail from this country in the fore or latter part of winter, in order
to arrive with God's help in New Netherland early in the Spring,
in March, or at latest in April, so as to be able to plant, during that
summer, garden vegetables, maize and beans, and moreover employ
the whole summer in clearing land and building cottages, as I shall
hereafter describe.
All then who arrive in New Netherland must immediately set
about preparing the soil so as to be able, if possible to plant some
winter grain, and to proceed the next winter to cut and clear the
timber. The trees are usually felled from the stump, cut up and
burnt in the field, unless such as are suitable for building, for pal-
isades, posts and rails, which must be prepared during the winter,
so as to be set up in the spring on the new made land which is in-
tended to be sown, in order that the cattle may not in any wise injure
the crops. In most lands is found a certain root, called red Wortel,
which must before ploughing, be extirpated with a hoe, expressly
made for that purpose. This being done in the winter, some plough
right around the stumps, should time or circumstances not allow
these to be removed; others plant tobacco, maize and beans, at first.
The soil even thus becomes very mellow, and they sow winter grain
the next fall. From tobacco, can be realized some of the expenses
incurred in clearing the land. The maize and beans help to support
both men and cattle. The farmer having thus begun, must en-
^ Documents relative to the Colonial History of the State of New York. \id. by
E. B. O'Callaghan (Albany, 1856), I, 365-71, passim.
IS READINGS IN ECX)NOMIC HISTORY
deavor, every year, to clear as much new land as he possibly can, and
sow it with such seed as he considers most suitable.
It is not necessary that the husbandman should take up much
stock in the beginning, since clearing land and other necessary labor
do not permit him to save much hay and to build barns for stabling.
One pair of draft horses or a yoke of oxen only is necessary, to ride
the planks for buildings, or palisades or rails from the land to the
place where they are to be set.
The farmer can get all sorts of cattle in the course of the second
summer, when he will have more leisure to cut and bring home hay,
also to build houses and bams for men and cattle.
Before beginning to build, 'twill above all things be necessary to
select a well located spot, either on some river or bay, suitable for the
settlement of a village or hamlet. This is previously properly sur-
veyed and divided into lots, with good streets according to the situ-
ation of the place. This hamlet can be fenced all around with high
palisades or long boards and closed with gates, which is advantageous
in fftff^ of attack by the natives, who heretofore used to exhibit their
insolence in new plantations.
Outside the village or hamlet, other land must be laid out which
can in general be fenced and prepared at the most trifling expense.
Those in New Netherland and especially in New England, who have
no means to build farm-houses at first according to their wishes, dig
a square pit in the ground, cellar fashion, six or seven feet deep, as
long and as broad as they think proper, case the earth inside all
round the wall with timber, which they line with the bark of trees
or something else to prevent the caving in of the earth; floor this
cellar with plank and wainscot it overhead for a ceiling, raise a roof
of spars clear up and cover the spars with bark or green sods, so that
they can live dry and warm in these houses with their entire families
for two, three and four years, it being understood that partitions are
run through those cellars which are adapted to the size of the family.
The wealthy and principal men in New England, in the beginning of
the Colonies, commenced their first dwelling-houses in this fashion
for two reasons; first, in order not to waste time building and not to
want food the next season; secondly, in order not to discourage
poorer laboring people whom they brought over in numbers from
Falbcrland. In the course of three or four years, when the country
adapted to agriculture, they built themselves handsome
spending on them several thousands.
After the houses art? buili in ihe above described manner, or other-
EXPLORATION AND COLONIZATION
13
wise according to each person's means and fancy, gardens are made
and planted in season with all sorts of pot-herbs, principally pars-
nips, carrots and cabbage, which bring great plenty into the hus-
bandman's dwelling. The maize can serve as bread for men, and food
for cattle.
The hogs, after having picked up their food for some months in
the woods, are crammed with corn in the fall ; when fat they are killed
and furnish a very hard and clean pork; a good article for the hus-
bandman who gradually and in time begins to purchase horses and
cows with the produce of his grain and the increase of his hogs, and
instead of a cellar as aforesaid, builds good farm-houses and barns. . . .
The following is the mode pursued by the West India Company
in the first planting of Bouweries.
The Company, at their own cost and in their own ships conveyed
several boors to New Netherland, and gave these the following terms: —
The farmer, being conveyed with his family over sea to New
Netherland, was granted by the Company for 'the term of six years a
Bouwerie, which was partly cleared, and a good part of which was fit
for the plough.
The Company furnished the farmer a house, barn, farming imple-
ments and tools, together with four horses, four cows, sheep and pigs
in proportion, the usufruct and enjoyment of which the husbandman
should have during the six years, and on the expiration thereof, return
the number of cattle he received. The entire increase remained
with the farmer. The farmer was bound to pay yearly one hundred
gilders and eighty pounds of butter rent for the cleared land and
bouwerie.
The country people who obtained the above mentioned conditions
all prospered during their residence on the Company's lands.
Afterwards the cattle belonging to the Company in New Nether-
land were distributed for some years among those who had no means
to purchase stock.
The risk of the cattle dying is shared in common, and after the
expiration of the contract the Company receives, if the cattle live,
the number the husbandman first received, and the increase which
is over, is divided half and half; by these means many people have
obtained stock and, even to this day, the Company have still con-
siderable cattle among the Colonists, who make use on the above
conditions of the horses in cultivating the farm; the cows serve for
the increase of the stock and for the support of the family. . . .
14 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
D. Advice to Immigranis to Maryland^ 1655^
hixa having lived nineteen years in V^irginia, John Hammond removed to
ICuyland, Irom which place he wrote the following account. It gives a trust-
worthy dcKription oC the conditions, as well as some good advice to immigrants.
WTien ye go aboard, expect the Ship somewhat troubled and in
a hurliburiy, untill ye deer the lands end, and that the Ship is rum-
maged, and things put to rights, which many times discourages the
Passengers, and makes them wish the Voyage unattempted: but
this is but for a short season, and washes off when at Sea, where the
time b pleasantly passed away, though not with such choise plenty
as the shore affords.
But when ye arrive and are settled, ye will find a strange alteration,
an abused Country giving the lye in your own approbations to those
that have calumniated it, and these infalable arguments may convince
all incredible and obstinate opinions, concerning the goodnesse and
delightfulnesse of the Country, that never any servants of late times
have gone thither, but in their Letters to their Friends commend and
approve of the place, and rather invite than disswade their acquaint-
ance from comming thither. . . .
The labour servants are put to, is not so hard nor of such continu-
ance as Husbandmen, nor Handecraftmen are kept at in England^
as I said little or nothing is done in winter time, none ever working
before sun rising nor after sun set, in the summer they rest, sleep or
exercise themselves five houres in the heat of the day, Saturdayes
aftenioon is alwayes their own, the old Holidayes are observed and
the Sabboath spent in good exercisesV)
The Women are not (as is reported) put into the ground to worke,
but occupie such domestique imployments and houswifery as in
Em^/andf that is dressing victuals, righting up the house, milking,
inqployed about dayries, washing, sowing, &c., and both men and
women have times of recreations, as much or more than in any part
of the world besides, yet som wenches that are nasty, beastly and not
fit to be so imployed are put into the ground, for reason tells us, they
mus( not at charge be transported and then maintained for nothing,
but those that prove so aukward are rather burthensome then serv-
ants desirable or usefull.
• Uik ami Rackd, or, Tkt Two FruitftM Sisters Virginia and Mary-land.
Hy Jubn lUmmood (London, 1656). Reprinted in Force, Tracts and Other
Fspm, III. no. dv, I i~i J, and in Original Narratives of Early American History,
XI, fS^J9i.
EXPLORATION AND COLONIZATION 15
The Country is fruitfull, apt for all and more than England can
or does produce. The usuall diet is such as in England, for the
rivers afford innumerable sortes of choyce fish, (if they will take the
paines to make wyers or hier the Natives, who for a small matter
will undertake it,) winter and summer, and that in many places
sufficient to serve the use of man, and to fatten hoggs. Water-fowle
of all sortes are (with admiration to be spoken of) plentifull and easie
to be killed, yet by many degrees more plentifull in some places than
in othersome. Deare all over the Country, and in many places so
many that venison is accounted a tiresom meat; wilde Turkeys are
frequent, and so large that I have seen some weigh neer threescore
pounds; other beasts there are whose flesh is wholsom and savourie,
such are unknowne to us; and therefore I will not stuff e my book
with superfluous relation of their names; huge Oysters and store in
all parts where the salt-water comes.
The Country is exceedingly replenished with Neat cattle, Hoggs,
Goats and Tame-f owle, but not many sheep; so that mutton is some-
what scarce, but that defect is supplied with store of Venison, other
flesh and fowle. The Country is full of gallant Orchards, and the
fruit generally more luscious and delightfull than here, witnesse the
Peach and Quince, the latter may be eaten raw savourily, the former
differs and as much exceeds ours as the best relished apple we have
doth the crabb, and of both most excellent and comfortable drinks
are made. Grapes in infinite manners grow wilde, so do Walnuts,
Smalnuts, Chesnuts and abundance of excellent fruits. Plums and
Berries, not growing or known in England; graine we have, both
English and Indian for bread and Bear, and Pease besides English
of ten several sorts, all exceeding ours in England; the gallant root
of Potatoes are common, and so are all sorts of rootes, herbes and
Garden stuff e.
E. An Invitation to Colonists for Carolina, 1666 ^
The following extract is from a pamphlet written to attra:ct colonists,
setting forth the terms upon which they wiU be settled in the province of Carolina.-
It will be noticed that both free persons and indented servants are welcomed.
The chief of the Privileges are as follows.
First, There is full and free Liberty of Conscience granted to all,
so that no man is to be molested or called in question for matters of
^ A Brief Description of the Province of Carolina. By Robert Home (?)
(London, 1666). Reprinted in Original Narratives of Early American History.
Edited by J. F. Jameson (New York, 1910), XII, 71-73. Printed by permis-
sion of the editor and the publishers, Charles Scribner's Sons.
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
i ; Concern; but every one to be obedient to the Civil Govem-
i i! God after their own way.
1 re is freedom from Custom, for all Wine, Silk,
Rai>ins, Currance, Oyl, Olives, and Almonds, that shall be raised in
Province for 7. years, after 4 Ton of any of those commodities
!>r im|X)rted in one Bottom.
'v, Ever>- Free-man and Free- woman that transport them-
V, ,1 Ser\-ants by the 25 of March next, being 1667. shall have
for Himself, Wife, Children, and Men-servants, for each 100 Acres
of Land for him and his Heirs forever, and for every Woman-servant
and Slave 50 Acres, paying at most Jrf. per acre, per annum , in lieu
of all demands, to the Lords Proprietors: Provided always, That
cvcr>' Man be armed with a good Musquet full bore, id. Powder,
and 20/. of Bullet, and six Months Provision for all, to serve them
whilst ihey raise Provision in that Countrey.
Fourthly^ Every Man-Servant at the expiration of their tune, is
to have of the Country a 100 Acres of Land to him and his heirs for
ever, paying only \d. {>er Acre, per annum, and the Women 50. Acres
of Land on the same conditions; their Masters also are to allow
them two Suits of Apparrel and Tools such as he is best able to
work with, according to the Custom of the Countrey.
Fifthly^ They are to have a Governour and Council appointed
from among themselves, to see the Laws of the Assembly put
in due execution; but the Governour is to rule but 3 years, and then
learn to obey; also he hath no power to lay any tax, or make or
abrogate any Law, without the Consent of the Colony in their
AMcmbly.
Sixikiy, They are to choose annually from among themselves, a
certain Number of Men, according to their divisions, which consti-
^^eneral Assembly with the Governour and his Council, and
' ide power of Making Laws, a!K] Layinc: Taxes f(^r the
common good when need shall require.
These are the chief and Fundamental privileges, but the Right
Honourable Lords Proprietors have promised (and it is their interest
so to do) to be ready to grant what other Privileges may be found
advantageous for the good, of the Colony.
Is there therefore any younger Brother who is bom of Gentile
Wood, and whose Spirit is elevated above the common sort, and yet
the hard uaage of our Country hath not allowed suitable fortune;
he wfll not surely be afraid to leave his Native Soil to advance hi
PortunM equal to his Blood and Spirit, and so he will avoid tho^c
EXPLORATION AND COLONIZATION 17^
unlawful ways too many of our young Gentlemen take to maintain
themselves according to their high education, having but small
Estates; here, with a few Servants and a small Stock a great Estate
may be raised, although his Birth have not entituled him to any
of the Land of his Ancestors, yet his Industry may supply him so,
as to make him the head of as famous a family. . . .
If any Maid or single Woman have a desire to go over, they
will think themselves in the Golden Age, when Men paid a Dowry
for their Wives; for if they be but Civil, and under 50 years of
Age, some honest Man or other, will purchase them for their
Wives.
Those that desire further advice, or Servants that would be
entertained, let them repair to Mr. Matthew Wilkinson, Ironmonger,
at the Sign of the Three Feathers, in Bishopsgate-Street, where they
may be informed when the ships will be ready, and what they must
carry with them.
F. Advice to Immigrants to South Carolina, lyji ^
The author here gives some specific directions and advice to intending emi-
grants such as would best aid them in making preparations for their departure
to a new and unknown country.
Proposals by Mr. Peter Purry, of Newfchatel, for Encouragement
of such Swiss Protestants as should agree to accompany him to
Carolina, to settle a New Colony.
There are only two Methods, viz: one for Persons to go as Serv-
ants, the other to settle on their own Account.
1. Those who are desirous to go as Servants must be Carpenters,
Vine-planters, Husbandmen, or good Labourers.
2. They must be such as are not very Poor, but in a Condition
to carry with them what is sufficient to support their common
necessity.
3. They must have at least 3 or 4 good Shirts, and a Suit of
Cloathes each.
4. They are to have each for their Wages 100 Livres yearly,
which make 50 Crowns of the Money of Newfchatel in Swisserland,
but their Wages are not to commence till the Day of their arrival
in Carolina.
^ A Description of the Province of South Carolina, Drawn up at Charles Town,
in September, 17 31. By J. P. Purry, et al. In Force, Tracts and Other Papers
(Washington, 1836), II, no. xi, 14-16.
i8 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
5. Expert Cari>enters shall have suitable Encouragement.
6. The time of their Contract shall be 3 Years, reckoning from
the Day of their arrival in that Country.
They shall be supply 'd in part of their Wages with Money
10 tDme from Swisserland^ till they imbark for Carolina.
8. Their Wages shall be paid them regularly at the end of every
Year; for security whereof they shall have the Fruits of their Labour,
and generally all that can be procured for them, whether Moveables
or I moveables.
0. Victuals and Lodging from the Day of their Imbarkation
shall not be put to their Account, nor their Passage by Sea.
10. They shall have what Money they want advanced during
the Term of their Service in part of their Wages to buy Linnen,
Clothes, and all other Necessaries.
11. If they happen to fall Sick they shall be lodg'd and nourish'd
Gratis, but their Wages shall not go on during their Illness, or that
they arc not able to Work.
12. They shall serve after Recovery, the time they had lost
during their Sickness.
13. What goes to pay Physicians or Surgeons, shall be put to their
Accompt.
As to those who go to settle on their own Account, they must
have at least 50 Crowns each, because their Passage by Sea, and Vict-
uals, will cost from 20 to 25 Crowns, and the rest of the Money shall
go to procure divers things which will be absolutely necessary for
the Voyage.
It may not be disagreeable in this Place to inform our Readers,
that Mr. Purry, on his Return to Smsserlatid, with this Account of
Carolina, soon prevail'd on many industrious Persons and their
Families to the Number of about 400, to go with him. On the nth
of this Month [August, 1732] they embarked at Calais in France,
on Board two English Ships, which arrived off Dover the next Day,
and arc now sailed on their Voyage. Mr. Bignion their Minister
cane to lumdim, and received Episcopal Ordination: So that the
Reflection! which w)mi- have r'A<\ on ilu' Rt'ligion of these People,
ut unjustly foundt
EXPLORATION AND COLONIZATION
G. Design of Establishing the Colony in Georgia^ lyjj
19
The colony of Georgia was planned as a philanthropic enterprise to serve as
a refuge for the poor and distressed in Europe. It was to be managed by a board
of trustees. General Oglethorpe, who was the founder of the colony, was a man
of the highest character and motives.
SOME ACCOUNT OF THE DESIGNS OF THE TRUSTEES FOR ESTABLISHING
THE COLONY OF GEORGIA IN AMERICA.
In America there are fertile lands sufficient to subsist all the
useless Poor in England, and distressed Protestants in Europe; yet
Thousands starve for want of mere sustenance. The distance makes
it difficult to get thither. The same v^^ant that renders men useless
here, prevents their paying their passage; and if others pay it for
'em, they become servants, or rather slaves for years to those who have
defrayed the expense. Therefore, money for passage is necessary,
but is not the only want; for if people were set down in America,
and the land before them, they must cut down trees, build houses,
fortify towns, dig and sow the land before they can get in a harvest;
and till then, they must be provided with food, and kept together,
that they may be assistant to each other for their natural support
and protection. . . .
From the Charter. — His Majesty having taken into his con-
sideration, the miserable circumstances of many of his own poor
subjects, ready to perish for want: as likewise the distresses of many
poor foreigners, who would take refuge here from persecution; and
having a Princely regard to the great danger the southern frontiers
of South Carolina are exposed to, by reason of the small number of
white inhabitants -there, hath, out of his Fatherly conipassion towards
his subjects, been graciously pleased to grant a charter for incor-
porating a number of gentlemen by the name of The Trustees for estab-
lishing the Colony of Georgia in America. They are impowered to
collect benefactions; and lay them out in cloathing, arming, sending
over, and supporting colonies of the poor, whether subjects or for-
eigners, in Georgia. And his Majesty farther grants all his lands
between the rivers Savannah and Alatamaha, which he erects into a
Province by the name of Georgia, unto the Trustees, in trust for the
poor, and for the better support of the Colony. . . .
^ A Brief Account of the Establishment of the Colony of Georgia under Gen.
James Oglethorpe (London, 1783). In Force, Tracts and Other Papers (Washing-
ton, 1835), I, no. ii, 4-5.
20
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
The Trustees intend to relieve such unfortunate persons as cannot
subfist here, and establish them in an orderly manner, so as to form
a well regulated. town. As far as their fund goes, they will defray
the charge of their passage to Georgia; give them necessaries, cattle,
land, and subsistence, till such time as they can build their houses
and clear some of their land. . . .
H. Information to Those Who Would Remove to America, iy6o ^
In spite of a century and a half of colonization of America by Europeans, and
opeckUy by EngUshmen, there was a great deal of Ignorance and misconception
M to actual oonditioiis there. No one was better fitted to describe the situation
and give tooie needed advice than Franklin, ^^^th his sound judgment and thorough
knovnedge.
Many persons in Europe, having directly or by letters, expressed
to the writer of this, who is well acquainted with North America,
their desire of transporting and establishing themselves in that
country; but who appear to have formed, through ignorance, mis-
taken ideas and expectations of what is to be obtained there; he
thinks it may be useful, and prevent inconvenient, expensive, and
fruitless removals and voyages of improper persons, if he gives some
clearer and truer notions of that part of the world, than appear to
have hitherto prevailed. . . .
The truth is, that though there are in that country few people so
miserable as the poor of Europe, there are also very few that in Europe
would be called rich; it is rather a general happy mediocrity that
prevails. There are few great proprietors of the soil, and few tenants;
moat people cultivate their own lands, or follow some handicraft or
merchandise; very few are rich enough to live idly upon their rents
or incomes, or to pay the highest prices given in Europe for painting,
statues, architecture, and the other works of art, that are more curious
than useful. ... Of civil offices, or employments, there are few; no
superfluous ones, as in Europe; and it is a rule established in some
of the States, th^t ro office should be so profitable as to make it
dcdrable. . . .
Tbeie ideas pre \ m ..i Uss in all the United States, it can
not be worth any m.i , , who luis a means of living at home, to
apatriate himself, in hopes of obtaining a profitable civil office in
America; and, as to military offices, they are at an end with the war,
theannics being disbande<l. Much less is it advisiihle for a person to
t .1. '^'^^ ^ ^'* »^ «««»•«« ^tmotf to America. By Benjamin Franklin.
In Workt (Sfiarks FxliUoo, Botton, 1840), II, 467-472.
EXPLORATION AND COLONIZATION 21
go thither, who has no other quality to recommend him but his birth.
In Europe it has indeed its value; but it is a commodity that cannot
be carried to a worse market than that of America, where people do not
inquire concerning a stranger, What is he? but. What can he do ? If he
has any useful art, he is welcome; and if he exercises it, and behaves well
he will be respected by all that know him; but a mere man of quahty
who, on that account, wants to live upon the public, by some ofl&ce
or salary, will be despised and disregarded. The husbandman is in honor
there, and even the mechanic, because their employments are useful
With regard to encouragements for strangers from government,
they are really only what are derived from good laws and liberty.
Strangers are welcome, because there is room enough for them all,
and therefore the old inhabitants are not jealous of them; the laws
protect them sufficiently, so that they have no need of the patronage
of great men; and everyone will enjoy securely the profits of his
industry. But, if he does not bring a fortune with him, he must work
and be industrious to live. One or two years' residence gives him
all the rights of a citizen; but the government does not, at present,
whatever it may have done in former times, hire people to become
settlers, by paying their passages, giving land, negroes, utensils,
stock, or any other kind of emolument whatsoever. In short, America
is the land of labor, and by no means what the English call Lubberland,
and the French Pays de Cocagne, where the streets are said to be
paved with half-peck loaves, the houses tiled with pancakes, and
where fowls fly about already roasted, crying, Come eat me!
Who then are the kind of persons to whom an emigration to
America may be advantageous? And what are the advantages they
may reasonably expect?
Land being cheap in that country, from the vast forests still void
of inhabitants, and not likely to be occupied in an age to come, inso-
much that the propriety of an hundred acres of fertile soil full of
wood may be obtained near the frontiers, in many places, for eight
or ten guineas, hearty young laboring men, who understand the
husbandry of corn and cattle, which is nearly the same in that country
as in Europe, may easily establish themselves there. A little money
saved of the good wages they receive there, while they work for others,
enables them to buy the land and begin their plantation, in which
they are assisted by the good-will of their neighbors, and some credit.
Multitudes of poor people from England, Scotland, Ireland, and
Germany, have by this means in a few years become wealthy farmers,
who, in their own countries, where all the lands are fully occupied,
sa READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
and the wages of labor low, could never have emerged from the poor
condition wherein they were bom.
From the salubrity of the air, the healthiness of the climate,
the plenty of good provisions, and the encouragement to early mar-
riages by the certainty of subsistence in cultivating the earth,
the increase of inhabitants by natural generation is very rapid in
America, and becomes still more so by the accession of strangers;
hence there is a continual demand for artisans of all the necessary
and useful kinds, to supply those cultivators of the earth with houses,
and with furniture and utensils of the grosser sorts, which cannot
so well be brought from Europe. Tolerably good workmen in any
of those mechanic arts are sure to find employ, and to be well paid
"' work, there being no restraints preventing strangers from
ig any art they understand, nor any permission necessary.
U they are poor, they begin first as servants or journeymen; and if
they arc sober, industrious, and frugal, they soon become masters,
establish themselves in business, marry, raise families, and become
respectable citizens.
Also, persons of moderate fortunes and capitals, who, having a
number of children to provide for, are desirous of bringing them up
to industr>', and to secure estates for their posterity, have oppor-
tunities of doing it in America, which Europe does not afford. There
they may be taught and practise profitable mechanic arts, without
incurring disgrace on tha| account, but on the contrary acquiring
respect by such abilities. There small capitals laid out in lands,
which daily become more valuable by the increase of people, afford
a ioUd prospect of ample fortunes thereafter for those children.
111. Grants of Land and Land Tenure
A. \ew England Laws on Inlieritance, 1641 ^
Thcte UwB ihow noi merely the eflfect of the Mosaic law upon the legal theories
ol the «Hy Pilgrims, but also the effect of common land holdings in England.
It look •omc time for them to adjust their theories to the reality of practically
unlimited land and to admit unrestricted private property in land.
( JiAP. IV.— 0/ the right of Inheritance,
*• ^^' the right of disposals of the Inheritance
^ ^ ^ rrv. Ivcth in the Generall Court, whatso-
ever Landf are given and 1 im,,.! by the Generall Court, to any
T"»*'n ..r penon shall lulon.' .ni<l nmaine as right of Inheritance to
\haf<utofthr A.;.: N,;. / nvlattd as they Qfc now established {IjondoTi,
i<mi. In For ' . ,iher I'apere ^'ashington, 1844), III, no. ix, 8-10.
EXPLORATION AND COLONIZATION 23
such Townes and to their successors, and to such persons and their
heires and Assignes as their propriety for ever.
Whatsoever Lands belong to any Town, shall be given and as-
signed by the Town or by such Officers therein, as they shall appoint
unto any person, the same shall belong and remaine, unto such persons
and his heires and assignes as his proper right for ever.
3. And in dividing of Lands to the severall persons in each Town,
as regard is to be had partly to the number of the persons in family:
To the more assigning the greater allotment, to the fewer lesse, and
partly by the number of beasts, by the which a man is fit to occupy
the Land assigned to him, and subdue it: Eminent respect (in this
case may be given to men of eminent quality and descent) in assign-
ing unto them more large and honorable accommodations, in regard
of their great disbursements to publike charges.
4. Forasmuch as all Civill affaires are to be administered and
ordered, so as may best conduce to the upholding and setting forward
of the worship of God in Church fellowship. It is therefore ordered,
that wheresoever the Lands of any mans Inheritance shall fall, yet no
man shall set his dwelling house above the distance of halfe a mile or
a mile at the furthest, from the meeting of the Congregation, where
the Church doth usually assemble for the worship of God.
5. Inheritances are to descend naturally to the next of kinne,
according to the Law of Nature, delivered by God.
6. If a man have more Sonnes than one, then a double portion
to be assigned, and bequeathed to the eldest Son, according to the
Law of Nature, unlesse his own demerit do deprive him of the dig-
nity of his Birth right. . . .
B. Advice on Granting Lands, 166 j ^
These suggestions as to granting land in a new country are significant, for
they show the slight value that attaches to the land and the paramount necessity
of attracting settlers. Under such conditions it was not to be wondered at that
large grants were frequent. Woodward was surveyor for the proprietors of
Carolina.
... I UNDERSTAND by M"^ Drummond and M"" Carterett that
you and the rest of the Right Honorable the Lords Proprietors of
the Province of Carolina have appointed me to be Surveyor for
your Countie of Albemarle. . . . And though I know it befitts not
me to dispute your commands but rather to operate them Coeca
Obedientia yet (by your Honors permission) I cannot omit to per-
^ Colonial Records of North Carolina. Edited by W. L. Saunders (Raleigh,
1886), I, 99-100.
24 RE.\DINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
forme another |mrt of my dutie (so I am though unworthy) one of
the counsel! here to give you my opinion concerning some passages
in the Instructions your Honore sent us. . . .
Next the Proportione of Land you have allotted with the Rent,
and conditione are by most People not well resented and the very
Rumor of them dis-courages many who had intentions to have re-
moved from Virginia hether: Whilst my Lord Baltamore allowed
to every persons imported but fiftie acres; Maryland for many yeares
had scarce fiftie families, though there Rent was rather easier then in
Virginia; but when he allotted one hundred Acres for a Person, it
90one began to People, and when he found them begin to increase,
he brought it to fiftie a head againe So if your Lordships please to
give large Incouragement for some time till the country be more
fully Peopled, your Honore may contract for the future upon what
condition you please But for the Present, To thenke that any men
will remove from Virginia upon harder Conditione then they can
live there will prove (I feare) a vaine Imagination, It bein Land
only that they come for. . . .
And it is my Opinion, (which I submitt to better Judgments)
that it will for some time conduce more to your Lordshipe Profit
to permit men to take up what tracts of Land they please at an
easie rate, then to stint them to small proportions at a great rent,
Provided it be according to the custome of Virginia which is fifty
Pole by the river side, and one mile into the woods for every hundred
acres; there being no man that will have any great desire to pay
Rent (though but a farthing an acre) for more land than he hopes
to gaine by. Rich men (which Albemarle stands in much need of)
may perhaps Uke up great Tracts; but then they will endeavour
to procure Tenants to helpe towards the payment of their Rent,
and will at their owne charge build howseing (which poore men can-
not compaase) to invite them: . . .
C. GrafUs of Land by Governors, ^774 *
}^ "H ^ provinces grants of land had been made by the governors to
^^y*^* •■*1 otheri, •ometimcs improperly and upon an enormous scale. The
i?!^!*?'^ "*""^"'** ^ ^** «*l""^t was collected by Uie Board of Trade to
lofli tae bMb of n«w instructions to the governors in the matter of granting
iMd. These Instfuctiooi wore Issued in 1774.
From the above Extracts and Observations it appears that the
Covenk>f* derive thci' of granting Lands solely from their
» PabUc Raoord Oflkc, Lomiuu. Colonial Office, Papers, 5. 216. pp. 5-7.
EXPLORATION AND COLONIZATION 25
Instructions, that these Powers differ according to the Circumstances
of the different Provinces, and that some of the Governors have no
Power to grant Lands:
In Virginia, which is an Old and well peopled Province, the Gov-
ernor is restrained from granting more than 1000 Acres in one Grant
to one Person. In Nova Scotia which is a late settled Province and
where the Land from its Northern Situation is reckoned not so valua-
ble the Governor has the power of granting the enormous Quantity
of 100,000 Acres: In West Florida and East Florida the quantity
is 20,000 Acres, And in Granada and the ceded Islands where the
Land has been esteemed extremely valuable the Gov"" has no Power
of granting even an Acre, this Trust being thought worthy of a very
expensive manner of Sale by Commissioners under a Special Com-
mission, to the Validity of whose Grants the Consent of the Governor
is however requisite in the first Instance, and the Confirmation of
the Lords Commissioners of the Treasury in the last.
The Power of granting Lands being therefore derived from the
Instructions, a fresh Instruction may either increase, diminish or
entirely annul the Governors Power of Granting Lands.
Method of Granting Land in Pensylvania.
Dr. Franklin's account of the Method of granting Lands in Pen-
silvania.
The whole lands are at the absolute Disposal of the Proprietor, who
grants them in what quantities and upon what Conditions he pleases.
The Method which has been generally followed hitherto is this
The Power to grant Lands has been given to the Governor by a
Special Commission. When any Person applyes for a Grant there is
a Warrant for a Survey, issued from the Land Office, returnable as
soon as the Lands are Surveyed. The quantity expressed in the
Warrant never exceeds 300 Acres. The patent ought to be made
out immediately upon return of the Warrant, but this is sometimes
allowed to lie over till the person is in condition to pay. The Con-
sideration required by the Proprietor is £5 Sterling per hundred
Acres paid down and 8s. 4d. Sterling per Annum of perpetual quit
rent. Although there are never any more than 300 Acres expressed
in the Warrant, yet there is no strict limitation provided the Grantee
pays for the whole that he takes up. There has been to the amount
of HOC Acres Surveyed and held under one Warrant.
Upon the whole the Doctor observes, that the Lands in Pensilvania
are more properly sold than granted by the Proprietor.
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
D. Methods of Granting Lands, lyyj ^
This discussion of the older and newer methods of granting lands in North
Ameriat is conlaine 1 in a paper submitted by Captain Williams to the Earl of
Dartmouth, November i8, 1773. It points out that the Crown had now deter
mined to sell the vacant lands rather than any longer to give them away. In this
way, as wdl as by means 01 taxes, the colonies were to be made to contribute to
the revenues of the mother country. It is interesting to note this early suggestion
for the s>'stcra of rectangular surveys afterwards adopted by the government of
the United States. After survey and di\ision the lands, under this system, were
auctioned oft. The system was inaugurated just prior to the Revolution, but the
r?jults of its working out were obscured by the war.
The Spirit of emigration to North America being now so prevail-
ing in Eurof>e, the Immense tracts of land which the Crown possesses
in that Continent are of Course of the greatest Importance, and
therefore every Step ought to be taken to regulate every thing relative
|b' them, to prevent the great Confusion which has hitherto attended
the grants of those lands and establish an easier and more certain
Method of collecting the Quit rents, which have allways fallen short
in every Province of what they really ought to be.
There has been two modes of granting lands in North America;
In the first and oldest the Patents only specified some particular
land Marks supposing to contain so many acres within them as were
intended to be granted to the person or persons who applied, but
they generally Contained a greater quantity, and the Quit rents of
those grants are lower than those of a later date;
In the second and latest Mode an exact description of the tract
granted is given in the Patent, and it also particularly Specifies the
Number of acres granted, but these likewise generally contain a
greater quantity than is Specified, as Neither the Surveyor General,
or his Deputy make an exact Survey of those tracts before the Patents
•re Issued out; and altho' the Quit rents are very Small in propor-
tion to the real value of the lands, Yet the owners do Not by these
means pay what they ought to do; to obviate this and assertain the
aaict quantity each land holder ought to pay for, every old patent
should be very exactly Survey'd and upon such a Survey every
penoQS being found to have a greater quantity of land than what
thdr patents Specify should be obliged to give up the overplus or
pay for every acre of such overplus the price given in the Province
for vacant lands, and i-v.-r r.ft.-rwards the full quit rents for the whole.
Ss«;
'^i u JIOO., 743.
EXPLORATION AND COLONIZATION
27
A Separate draught of each patent should be Made out very distinct
and accurate, Sworn to by the Surveyor General or his Deputy,
delivered and lodged at the Council Office, after which an exact Map
of each Province distinquishing every patent and the quantity of
lands contained in each should be made out from the Several draughts
and delivered at the Council's Office by the Surveyor General; No
Patent should be Issued out from this time for vacant lands but
what should be very exactly Survey'd and a draught of such a Survey
particularly describing and Specifying the exact quantity of acres be
attested upon Oath by the Surveyor General or his Deputy and
annexed to the Patent. . . .
NB, as Government is Come to a determination to dispose of all
vacant lands in North America by way of sale, the Crown's revenue
might hereafter be considerably encreased by having the Several
tracts laid out and numbered into townships of twenty thousand
acres each as in the draught below, then every other Number only
should be disposed of at first at a low rate, untill the half of each
tract so laid out is granted, keeping and reserving to the Crown the
remaining checkered half to be sold hereafter, and which the first
Settlers as well as New ones would then be glad to purchase at a
good price and a higher quit rent, to the great emolument of the
Crown who would also by this means settle much sooner every vacant
tract in each Province.
Draught of a tract of land
supposed to contain five hun-
dred thousand acres devided
into twenty five townships of
twenty thousand acres each
thirteen of which are disposed
of Immediately and twelve
reserved to be sold at an advanced price, as for example 13
townships sold now at one shilling p"" acre and Subject to a quit
rent of | per hundred acres will give £13,000 and £325 per annum
and Supposing that in ten years time the twelve remaining townships
sell only at the rate of three shillings p^ acre and Subject to a quit
rent of three pence, will give £36,000 and £3000 per annum.
UlAI'll-.k II
AGRICULTURE, INDUSTRY, AND TRADE, 1607-176 3
The oocupfttkNis to which the colonists addressed themselves after their set-
tlement in America may be dixided into three groups. In the first come agri-
cultuie, and stock raising and the extractive industries, as lumbering, the fur
tiade, and fiihing. To these the colonists turned as offering the quickest and most
lucrati\T reward for their efforts. The soil was everywhere rich and extremely
producti\*e, while necessity dictated resort to agriculture to secure a permanent
SttbttStenoe. Forest and water teemed with life and offered products that could
be secured with a minimum of effort, and, what was quite as important, with a
application of capital. The products thus obtained were moreover in
demand in Europte and could be easily exchanged there for the manufactured
and commodities of the Old World.
The second group of occupations were those that called for a larger investment
of capital and more time and labor for their production. Such were shipbuilding,
manufacturing, and the production of naval stores. While the last was closely
■IKed to the extractive industries, it involved considerable skill and capital to
develop it, while the returns were rather uncertain. Consequently all of these
industries were developed more slowly and later than agriculture and the extractive
industriet, They can flourish only after a community has secured for itself an
■aeured subsistence and has begun to accumulate capital.
The third branch of industry was that of commerce, or the exchange of the
raw materials and natural products of the New W^orld for the manufactured com-
modities, textiles, toob, etc., of the industrially more developed nations of Europe.
In this trade the colonists not only offered their products for exchange, but also
acted as carriers and earned large profits with their ships. A most lucrative branch
of tiib trade consisted in the exchange of the American continental products for
tboee crown in the warmer climate of the West Indies.
AGRICULTURE
I. Methods of the Indians
Indian Agriculture in Virginia, 16 12 *
The fine task that confronted the colonists was to provide themselves with
fMd, and in solving this problem they were greatly assisted by observing the
pncUoe o( the Indians and often by friendly advice from them, as from Poco-
hoBUs in Virginia and Squanlo in New England. In planting and cultivating
***''^- •^'™ •■• ••* unfamiliar grain, but one uix)n which they principally relied
^J^^y^^fr* */ yininia and Proceedings of the Colonic. By Captain John
Mk OMord. i6ta). In Original Narratives of Early American History. Edited
1^ J. r. JMMIOB (New York, 1910), IV 95-<i. Printed by i)ermission of the
•dllor and the publishers. Charles Scribncr's Sons.
AGRICULTURE, INDUSTRY AND TRADE 29
in the first distressful years, they followed exactly the Indian methods. These are
described for us by John Smith in Virginia.
The greatest labour they take, is in planting their corne, for the
country naturally is overgrowne with wood. To prepare the ground
they bruise the barke of the trees neare the roote, then do they scortch
the roots with fire that they grow no more. The next yeare with a
crooked peece of wood, they beat up the woodes by the rootes; and
in that moulds, they plant their corne. Their manner is this. They
make a hole in the earth with a sticke, and into it they put 4 graines
of wheat and 2 of beanes. These holes they make 4 foote one from
another. Their women and children do continually keepe it with
weeding, and when it is growne midie high, they hill it about like a
hop-yard.
In Aprill the^ begin to plant, but their chiefe plantation is in May,
and so they continue till the midst of June. What they plant in
Aprill they reape in August, for May in September, for June in
October. Every stalke of their corne commonly beareth two eares,
some 3, seldome any 4, many but one, and some none. Every eare
ordinarily hath betwixt 200 and 500 graines. . . .
II. Agriculture in New England
Poor Farming by New Englanders, 1775^
Agriculture was the primary industry during the whole of the colonial period
and after the first few years of trial offered a certain and comfortable living to the
colonist. But since the land was relatively so abundant as compared with labor
and capital it was used uneconomically and wastefuUy. The colonial system of
agriculture has generally been called a system of "land butchery," but it was
natural under the circumstances and economically intelligible if not altogether
justifiable.
A careful survey of American agriculture from Nova Scotia to Georgia was
made in 1775 by the anonymous author of American Husbandry, which furnishes
the best picture we have of conditions as they existed toward the end of the
colonial period. We may, however, accept them as fairly representative of condi-
tions during the larger part of this period, for little change had been made and few
improvements introduced. The writer describes American practices carefully and
intelligently, but with a strong prejudice for Old World methods. He is most <
severe in his criticism of New England methods of tillage and treatment of cattle,
which are described in the following extract.
The crops commonly cultivated are, first maize, which is the
grand product of the country, and upon which the inhabitants prin-
* American Husbandry. By an American (London, 1775). I, 50, 51-2,
55-8, 80-1.
1.
s.
d.
o
o
6
o
II
8
o
3
6
o
4
6
o
2
6
39 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
dpally feed. . . . The cxpences of this culture per acre have been
thus stated
Seed..
Culture
Hanesting, &c
Conveyance to market o
Sundries
And the value, straw included, amounts to, from 50s. to 4I.
sterling, per English acre, which is certainly very considerable: but
then their management in other respects renders the culture not so
cheap as it may appear at first sight, for the New England farmers
practice pretty much the same system as their brethren in Canada;
ihey have not a just idea of the importance of throwing their crops
into a proper arrangement, so as one may be a preparation for another,
and thereby save the barren expence of a mere fallow. Maize is a
very exhausting crop; scarce anything exhausts the land more. . . .
Besides maize, they raise small quantities of common wheat; but
it does not produce so much as one would apprehend from the great
richness of the soil: . . .
Barley and oats are very poor crops, yet do they cultivate both
in all i>art8 of New England: the crops are such as an English farmer,
used to the husbandry of the eastern parts of the kingdom, would
think not worth standing; this I attribute entirely to climate, for
they have land equal to the greatest productions of those plants.
Their common management of these three sorts of grain, wheat,
barley, and oats, b to sow them chiefly on land that has laid fallow
for two or three years, that is, left undisturbed for weeds and all
sorts of trumpery to grow; though at other times they sow oats or
barley after maize, which they are enabled to do by the culture they
give the latter plant while it is growing: . . .
Pease, beans, and tares, are sown variously through the province,
but scarcely anywhere managed as they are in the well cultivated
parti of the mother country. But every planter or farmer grows
MOUffh of the food for fattening hogs, for supplying his own family,
and driving some fat ones to market. Hogs are throughout the ,
province In great plenty, and very large, a considerable export from ,
the province constantly goes on in barrelled pork, besides the vast |
" there is for the fishery, and the shipping m general.
AGRICULTURE, INDUSTRY AND TRADE 31
Apples may be mentioned as an article of culture throughout
New England, for there is no farmer, or even cottager, without a
large orchard: some of them of such extent, that they make three or
four hundred hogsheads of cyder a man; besides exporting immense
quantities of apples from all parts of the province. The orchards
in New England are reckoned as profitable as any other part of the
plantation. . . .
The cattle commonly kept here are the same as in Great Britain:
cows, oxen, horses, sheep, and hogs; they have large dairies, which
succeed quite as well as in Old England; oxen they fat to nearly as
great a size; their mutton is good; and the wool which their sheep
yield is long but coarse; but they manufacture it into coarse cloths,
that are the common and only wear of the province, except the gentry,
who purchase the fine cloths of Britain: no inconsiderable quantities
of these coarse New England cloths are also exported to other colonies,
to the lower people of whom, especially to the northward, they answer
better than any we can send them. The horses are excellent, being
the most hardy in the world; very great numbers are exported to
the West-Indies, and elsewhere. . . .
And this mention of cattle leads me to observe, that most of the
farmers in this country are, in whatever concerns cattle, the most
negligent ignorant set of men in the world. Nor do I know any coun-
try in which animals are worse treated. Horses are in general,
even valuable ones, worked hard, and starved: they plough, cart,
and ride them to death, at the same time that they give very little
heed to their food; after the hardest day's works, all the nourish-
ment they are like to have is to be turned into a wood, where the
shoots and weeds form the chief of the pasture; unless it be after
the hay is in, when they get a share of the after-grass. A New
Englander (and it is the same quite to Pensylvania) will ride his
horse full speed twenty or thirty miles; tye him to a tree, while he
does his business, then re-mount, and gallop back again. This bad
treatment extends to draft oxen; to their cows, sheep, and swine;
only in a different manner, as may be supposed. There is scarce
any branch of rural oeconomy which more demands attention and
judgment than the management of cattle; or one which, under a-
judicious treatment, is attended with more profit to the farmers in all
countries; but the New England farmers have in all this matter
the worst notions imaginable.
I must, in the next place, take notice of their tillage, as being
weakly and insufficiently given: worse ploughing is no where to be
32 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
I, yet the farmers get tolerable crops; this is owing, particularly
in the new settlements, to the looseness and fertility of old wood-
lands, which, with very bad tillage, will yield excellent crops: a
dicumstance the rest of the province is too apt to be guided by,
foe seeing the effects, they are apt to suppose the same treatment
wiO do on land long since broken up, which is far enough from being
the case. Thus, in most parts of the province, is found shallow and
unlevel furrows, which rather scratch than turn the land; and of
this bad tillage the farmers are very sparing, rarely giving two plough-
ings if they think the crop will do with one; the consequence of which
is their products being seldom near so great as they would be under
a different management. Nor are their implements well made, or
evpn well talt uiated for the work they are designed to perform: . . .
111. Agriculture in the Middle Colonies
A. Agriculture in New York, lyy^ ^
In the more genial climate and richer soil of the Middle Colonies the returns
to Bun'i cultivation of the land were greater than they were in New England,
and there wa» a greater variety of agricultural products. The author of American
Huxhomdry leems impressed by these facts and is less severe in his criticisms of
prevailing methods.
Wheat in many parts of the province [New York] yields a larger
produce than is conmion in England: upon good lands about Albany,
where the climate is the coldest in the country, they sow two bushels
and better upon one acre, and reap from 20 to 40: the latter quantity,
however, is not often had; but from 20 to 30 bushels are common,
and this with such bad husbandry as would not yield the like in
England, and much less in Scotland. This is owing to the richness
and freshness of the soil. In other parts of the province, particularly
adjoinmg to New Jersey and Pensylvania, the culture is better and
the country more generally settled. Though there are large tracts
of waste huid within twenty miles of the city of New York.
Rye is a common crop upon the inferior lands, and the sort they
produce is pretty good, though not equal to the rye of England.
The crops of it are not so great in produce as those of wheat on tlu
belter lands.
Maixe b sown generally throughout the province, and they gt t
vat crops of it. . . . It is also of great advantage in affording a vast
» AmmifM audandry. By an American (Undon, 1775). I, 98-103.
AGRICULTURE, INDUSTRY AND TRADE 33
produce of food for cattle in the winter, which in this country is a
matter of great consequence, where they are obHged to keep all their
cattle housed from November till the end of March, with exception
indeed of unprovident farmers, who trust some out the chief of the
winter, to their great hazard.
Barley is much sown in all the southern parts of the province;
and the crops they sometimes get of it are very great, but the grain
is not of a quahty equal to that of Europe. They make much malt
and brew large quantities of beer from it at New York, which serves
the home consumption, and affords some also for exportation. Pease
are a common article of culture here, and though uncertain in their
produce, yet are they reckoned very profitable; and the straw is
valued as winter food. Thirty bushels per acre they consider as a
large crop, but some times they get scarcely a third of that. Oats
they sow in common, and the products are generally large; sixty
bushels an acre have been known on land of but moderate fertility.
Buckwheat is everywhere sown, and a few crops are supposed to pay
the farmer better, at the same time that they find it does very little
• prejudice to the ground, in which it resembles pease.
Potatoes are not common in New England, but in New York
.^^ many are planted; and upon the black, loose, fresh woodland they
f get very great crops, nor does any pay them better if so well, for at
I the city of New York there is a constant and ready market for them ;
1 I have been assured that from five to eight hundred bushels have
I, been often gained on an acre.
There are many very rich meadows and pastures in all parts of
the province; and upon the brooks and rivers, the watered ones
(for they are well acquainted with that branch of husbandry) are
mown twice and yield large crops of hay. In their marshes they get
large crops also, but it is a coarse bad sort; not however to a degree,
' as to make cattle refuse it, on the contrary, the farmers find it of
great use in the winter support of their lean cattle, young stock, and
■y cows. . . . The fruits in this province are much superior to those
in New England; and they have some, as peaches and nectarines,
> which will not thrive there. Immense quantities of melons, and water
melons are cultivated in the fields near New York, where they come
to as great perfection as in Spain and Italy ; nor can it well be conceived
how much of these fruits and peaches, &c. all ranks of people eat here,
and without receiving any ill consequence from the practice. This
is an agreeableness far superior to any thing we have in England;
and indeed, the same superiority runs through all their fruits, and
34 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
several articles of the kitchen garden, which are here raised without
trouble, and in profusion. Every planter and even the smallest
fanners have all an orchard near their house of some acres, by means
of which they command a great quantity of cyder, and export apples
by ship loads to the West Indies. Nor is this an improper place to
obser\'e that the rivers in this province and the sea upon the coast
are richly furnished with excellent fish; oysters and lobsters are no
where in greater plenty than in New York. I am of opinion they
are more plentiful than at any other place on the globe; for very
many poor families have no other subsistence than oysters and bread.
Nor is thb the only instance of the natural plenty that distinguishes
thb country: the woods are full of game, and wild turkies are very
plentiful; in these particulars New York much exceeds New
England.
B. Agriculture in New Jersey, iy4g ^
The same wasteful methods that characterized colonial agriculture elsewhere
were noted by Peter Kalm in New Jersey and Pennsylvania. Kalm was a Swedish
botanist and professor of economics who traveled in America during the years
1748 to 1751. He was a trained and accurate observer and his reports are the most
trustworthy that we have.
The r>'e grows very ill in most of the fields [in New Jersey], which
is chiefly owing to the carelessness in agriculture, and to the poorness
of the fields, which are seldom or never manured. After the inhabi-
tants have converted a tract of land into fields, which had been a
forest for many centuries together, and which consequently had a
very fine soil, they use it as such, as long as it will bear any corn;
and when it ceases to bear any, they turn it into pastures for the
cattle, and rake new corn-fields in another place, where a fine soil can
be met with, and where it has never been made use of for this purpose.
Thb kind of agriculture will do for some time; but it will afterwards
have bad consequences, as every one may clearly see. A few of
the inhabitanU, however, treated their fields a little better: the English
in general have carried agriculture to a higher degree of perfection
than any other nation. But the depth and richness of the soil,
which thoie found here who came over from England, (as they werej
preparing land for ploughing which had been covered with woods j
from timet Immemorial) misled them, and made them careless hus-
• TrtmU iMh AXA Ammiu. By Peter Kalm. (2d ed., London, 1772.) In
f1akmum*% Voyafet and Travcb. XIII. 564-5. 4io, 401.
AGRICULTURE, INDUSTRY AND TRADE 35
bandmen. . . . They had nothing to do but to cut down the wood,
put it up in heaps, and to clear the dead leaves away. They could
then immediately proceed to ploughing, which in such loose ground
is very easy; and having sown their corn, they got a most plentiful
harvest. This easy method of getting a rich crop has spoiled the
English and other European inhabitants, and induced them to adopt
the same method of agriculture which the Indians make use of; that
is, to sow uncultivated grounds, as long as they will produce a crop
without manuring, but to turn them into pastures as soon as they can
bear no more, and to take in hand new spots of ground, covered since
time immemorial with woods, which have been spared by the fire
or the hatchet ever since the creation. This is likewise the reason
why agriculture, and the knowledge of this useful branch, is so im-
perfect here, that one can learn nothing in a great tract of land,
neither of the English, nor of the Swedes, Germans, Dutch, and French;
except that, from their gross mistakes and carelessness for futurity,
one finds opportunities every day of making all sorts of observations,
and of growing wise at the expence of other people. In a word,
the corn-fields, the meadows, the forests, the cattle, &c. are treated
with great carelessness by the inhabitants. We can hardly be more
lavish of our woods in Sweden and Finland than they are here: their
eyes are fixed upon the present gain, and they are blind to futurity.
Every day their cattle are harrassed by labour, and each generation
decreases in goodness and size, by being kept short of food, as I have
before mentioned. . . .
IV. Agriculture in the South
A. A Colonial Plantation, 1686 ^
The following description of a Virginia plantation at the end of the 1 7th century
was written by Colonel William Fitzhugh, a prosperous planter, lawyer, and mer-
chant. When he died in 1701, he left 54,000 acres of land and many slaves. The
importance of tobacco is clearly shown in the account of the income to be derived
from this plantation.
April 22nd, 1686.
Doctr. Ralph Smith
In order to the Exchange you promised to make for me & I desire
you to proceed therein, to say to Exchange an Estate of Inheritance
^ Letters of William Fitzhugh. In the Virginia Magazine of History and
Biography (Richmond, 1893), I, 395-6. Printed by permission of the publisher,
the Virginia Historical Society.
36 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
in land there [i. e. England] of two or three hundred pound a year,
or in houses in any town of three or four hundred pound a year, I
shall be something particular in the relation of my concerns here that
is to go in return thereof. As first the Plantation where I now live
contains a thousand acres, at least 700 acres of it being rich thicket,
the remainder good hearty plantable land, without any waste either
by marshes or great swamps the commodiousness, conveniency, &
pleasantness yourself well knows, upon it there is three quarters well
furnished with all necessary houses; grounds and fencing, together
with a choice crew of negro's at each plantation, most of them this
country bom, the remainder as likely as most in Virginia, there
being twenty nine in all, with stocks of cattle & hogs at each quarter,
upon the same land, is my own Dwelling house furnished with all
iccommodations for a comfortable & gentile living, as a very good
dwelling house with rooms in it, four of the best of them hung &
nine of them plentifully furnished with all things necessary & con-
venient, & all houses for use furnished with brick chimneys, four
good Cellars, a Dairy, Dovecot, Stable, Barn, Henhouse, Kitchen &
aU other conveniencys & all in a manner new, a large Orchard, of
about 2500 Aple trees most grafted, well fenced with a Locust fence,
which is as durable as most brick walls, a Garden, a hundred foot
square, well palled in, a Yeard wherein is most of the foresaid neces-
sary houses, pallizado'd in with locust Punchens, which is as good
as if it were walled in & more lasting than any of our bricks, together
with a good Stock of Cattle, hogs, horses, mares, sheep, &c., neces-
laiy servants belonging to it, for the supply and support thereof.
About a mile & half distance a good water Grist miln, whose tole I
find sufficient to find my own family with wheat & Indian corn for
our necesfiitys & occasions up the River in this country three tracts
of land more, one of them contains 21996 acres, another 500 acres, &
one other 1000 acres, all good convenient & commodious Seats, &
w** in few years will yield a considerable annual Income. A stock
of Tob* with the crops and good debts lying out of about 250000^**
besides sufficient of almost all sorts of goods, to supply the familys &
the Quarter's occasion for two if not three years. Thus I have given
you some particulars, which I thus deduce the yearly crops of Corn
•od Tob* together with the surplusage of meat more than will serve
the family's use, will amount annually to 60000''' Tob° W*^ at 10 shil-^
Uagi p C" 30o£ p annum, & the negroes increase being all young &
a €0iiiideimble parcel of breeders will keep that stock good for ever.
The ttock of Tob* managed with an inland trade will yearly yield
AGRICULTURE, INDUSTRY AND TRADE 37
60000^^ Tob° without hazard or risque, which will be both clear
without charge of house keeping or disbursements for servants cloth-
ing. The Orchard in a very few years will yield a large supply to
plentifuU house keeping or if better husbanded yield at least loooo^^
Tob° annual income. . . .
To Doctr. Ralph Smith in Bristol
B. Tobacco Cultivation in Virginia, 1650 *
As early as the middle of the 17th century the main features which characterized
the growing of tobacco were evident in Virginia, These were the exhaustion of the
soil, the lack of rotation of crops or of fertilization of the soil, the dispersion of the
population, and the necessity of a large amount of fresh land to replace that which
was worn out. Clayton was an English clergyman and has given an unusually
intelligent account of Virginia.
But not to ramble after here-say, and other Matters; but to return
to the parts of Virginia inhabited by the English, which in general
is a very fertile Soil, far surpassing England, ... for the generality
of Virginia is a sandy Land with a shallow Soil: so that after they
have clear'd a fresh piece of Ground out of the Woods, it will not
bear Tobacco past two or three Years, unless Cow-pened; for they
manure their Ground by keeping their Cattle, as in the South you
do your Sheep, every Night confining them within Hurdles, which
they remove when they sufficiently dung'd one spot of Ground; but
alas! they cannot improve much thus, besides it produces a strong
sort of Tobacco, in which the Smoakers say they can plainly taste
the fulsomness of the Dung. Therefore every three or four Years
they must be for clearing a new piece of Ground out of Woods,
which requires much Labour and Toil, it being so thick grown all
over with massy Timber. Thus their Plantations run over vast
Tracts of Ground, each ambitious of engrossing as much as they can,
that they may be sure to have enough to plant, and for their Stocks
and Herds of Cattle to range and to feed in; that Plantations of
1000, 2000, or 3000 Acres are common, whereby the Country is thinly
inhabited; the Living solitary and unsociable; Trading confused
and dispersed; besides other Inconveniences: Whereas they might
improve 200 or 300 Acres to more Advantage, and would make the
Country much more healthy; for those that have 3000 Acres, have
^ A Letter from Mr. John Clayton, Rector of Crofton at Wakefield in Yorkshire,
to the Royal Society, May 12, 1688. In Force, Tracts and Other Papers (Washington,
1844), III, no. xii, 20-23, passim.
38 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
acaice cleared 600 Acres thereof, which is peculiarly term'd the
Plantation, l)eing surrounded with 2400 Acres of Wood: . . . Now,
you must know they top their Tobacco, that is, take away the little
top bud, when the Plant has put forth as many Leaves as they think
the richness of the Ground will bring to a Substance; but generally
when it has shot forth four or six Leaves. And when the top-bud is
gone, it puts forth no more Leaves, but Side-branches, which they
call Suckers, which they are careful ever to take away, that they may
not impoverish the Leaves.
C. Tobacco the Sole Crop in Virginia, 1703 ^
For a century after the settlement of Virginia tobacco was cultivated almost
to the ezduskm of every other agricultural product.
Colonel Robert Quary to the Lords of Trade
.... The People are very numerous — dispersed through the
whole province [of Virginia] — Their almost sole business is plant-
ing and improving Tobacco, even to that degree that most of them
•carce allow themselves time to produce their necessary provision,
and consequently take little leisure to busy themselves about matters
ofSUle. . . .
Your Lordshipps'
Most obedient servant
(signed) Robt Quary
D. Diversified Agriculture in Virginia, 1775 ^
By the lecond third of the i8th century the exhaustion of the tobacco lands of
Vlmiiiia tod Maryland led to a decline in the cultivation of tobacco and the adoption
ol BOfC divenified general famiitiL'.
Ai to fruit trees, iht_> iur>c all ihusc which are kiiuwn io us in
Europe or Pcnsylvania; particularly, apples, pears, cherries, quinces,
pltimt, grapes, peaches, and nectarines, in the same plenty as in
Ptetylvania, so as to be applied to the same use of feeding hogs as
there. All other fruits are produced here, as may from the climate be
rdolm to Ike Cotoniat History of New York. Edited by E. B.
(Albaiiy. 1856-87), IV, 1051.
• Awmkm ButkMdry. By an American (London, 1775), L 210-20.
AGRICULTURE, INDUSTRY AND TRADE 39
Besides tobacco, which is the staple of these colonies, and of which
I shall speak more by-and-by, wheat and all our other kinds of grain
and pulse thrive here equally, if not in a superior degree, to any of
our other colonies; . . . and in these articles of common hus-
bandry the planters have increased much more than in tobacco,
for reasons which I shall explain hereafter.
No part of America, or indeed of the world, boasts more plentiful
or more general production of all sorts of garden vegetables; and in
a state of excellence that is proportioned to the heat of the climate.
The same remark may also be made of their fish and fowl, having
every sort that is found in Pensylvania, with others that are peculiar
to the country; being in all respects of food as plentiful as any
territory in the world.
E. Cattle in South Carolina, ly^i ^
Cattle multiplied rapidly, even when uncared for, in the mild climate and
plentiful pasturage of South Carolina. Herds of a thousand cattle or more were
not infrequent.
The Cattle of Carolina are very fat in Summer, but as lean in
Winter, because they can find very little to eat, and have no Cover
to shelter them from the cold Rains, Frosts, and Snows, which lasts
sometimes 3 or 4 Days: Only the Cattle design'd for the Butchery
are fed, and they bad enough, with Potatoes, Straw, and Grain;
but they always lie in the open Field, for there is not one Hovel in
all the Country, either for Oxen or Cows. If you object this" to the
Planters, they answer, that such^ Houses or Hovels would do very
well, but that they have too many other Affairs to think of that.
The last Winter being very severe about 10,000 horned Cattle died
of Hunger and Cold. Notwithstanding this, the People will not
change their Conduct, because they do not understand the manner
of ordering Cattle, nor even know how to mow the Grass, in order
to make it into Hay, of which they might have great Plenty for Fodder.
Their Ignorance in this respect is very great, which is the Reason that
Butter is always dear, being sold last Winter at 75. 6d. per Pound,
and in January and February last it was sold at Charles Town for
125. per Pound: In a word, nothing would be more easy than fot
Persons who understand Country Affairs to grow rich in a little time.
There is so great a number of Cattle, that a certain Planter had last
^ A Description of the Province of South Carolina. By J. P. Purry et al. In
Force, Tracts and Other Papers (Washington, 1837), II, no. xi, 8-9.
40 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
Spring 200 Calves marked, which he let run in the Woods with
other CatUe; Nobody looks after them, or takes any other Care,
but to bring them together in the Evening to lie in a Park near the
House.
At certain times they kill a great many to send the Flesh salted
to several other Colonies, where there is little Pasturage, particularly
to the lales of AnlilUs, and in general to all those of the Torrid
Horses, the best Kind in the World, are so plentiful, that you -
seldom 'see any body travel on foot, except Negroes, and they oftner
CD horseback; so that when a Taylor, a Shoemaker, or any other
Tradesman, Is obliged to go but 3 Miles from his House, it would be
very extraordinary to see him travel on foot.
There is likewise in this Country a prodigious number of Swine,^
whkh multiply infinitely, and are kept with very little Charge,
because they find almost all the Year Acorns, of which there is 5 or 6
sorts, as also Nuts, Walnuts, Chesnuts, Herbs, Roots, b'c. in the
Woods: So that if you give them neverso little at Home they become
fat; after which you may salt and send great quantities of them to
the Isles of Barbadoes, St. Christophers, Jamaica, b'c. which produced
very good Returns either in Money or Merchandizes.
Of all Animals in that Country, none are a less Charge than Sheep, •
for they subsist only on what they find in the Fields; yet are always
in good Case, and bring forth their Lambs regularly; and there is
a particular sort, whose Wool is not inferiour to the finest Spanish
Wool
F. Agriculture and Stock-raising in North Carolina^ 7775 *
Tl» practice o( an orderly agriculture had not progressed very far in North
Ckfoliiia, even by the end of the colonial period. The bounty of nature and the
VMt cxtCBt of land made careful and systematic methods of culture or care of cattle
to the colonist, and he consequently adopted wasteful and
These are described by our best if severest critic.
The products of North Carolina are rice, tobacco, indigo, cotton,
wbeat, peas, beans, Indian com, and all sorts of roots, especially
potatoes. Rice is not so much cultivated here as in South Carolina;
but in the latter they raise no tobacco, whereas in North Carolina
it is one of their chief articles. It grows in the northerly parts of the
rkm BmkandO' By an American (London, i77S)» I, 331-2, 337-8,
AGRICULTURE, INDUSTRY AND TRADE 41
province, on the frontiers of Virginia, from which colony it is ex-
ported. Indigo grows very well in the province, particularly in the
southern parts, and proves a most profitable branch of culture.
Cotton does very well, and the sort is so excellent, that it is much to
be wished they had made a greater progress in it. The greatest
articles of their produce which is exported are tar, pitch, turpentine,
and every species of lumber, in astonishing quantities. . . .
The two great circumstances which give the farmers of North
Carolina such a superiority over those of most other colonies, are,
first, the plenty of land; and, secondly, the vast herds of cattle
kept by the planters. The want of pcfrts, as I said, kept numbers
from settling here, and this made the land of less value, consequently
every settler got large grants; and, falling to the business of breeding
cattle, their herds became so great, that the profit from them alone
is exceeding great. It is not an uncommon thing to see one man
the master of from 300 to 1200, and even to 2000 cows, bulls, oxen,
and young cattle; hogs also in prodigious numbers. Their manage-
ment is to let them run loose in the woods all day, and to bring them
up at night by the sound of a horn: sometimes, particularly in
winter, they keep them during the night in enclosures, giving them
a little food, and letting the cows and sows to the calves and pigs;
this makes them come home the more regularly. Such herds of cattle
and swine are to be found in no other colonies; and when this is
better settled, they will not be so common here; for at present the
woods are all in common, and people's property has no other boundary
or distinction than marks cut in trees, so that the cattle have an
unbounded range; but when the country becomes more cultivated,
estates will be surrounded by enclosures, and consequently the numbers
of cattle kept by the planters will be proportioned to their own lands
only. . . .
The system pursued here is as faulty as in most other parts of
America; it consists in cropping the land with tobacco as long as it
will bear it; then they will take two crops of maize, and after that
throw in wheat, peas, &c. for several years longer; after which they
leave the land to become forest again; as fast as they want more,
they take it from the old woodland, serving it in the same manner.
It is owing to this wretched system that many of their corn-fields
are so full of weeds, that in some it is difficult to know what is
the crop.
42 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
INDUSTRY
I. General Description
State of the British Plantations in America, in 1721^
A deufled aax>unt of the boundaries, government, population, products,
iiidustrin, militiA, and revenue of the various American colonies for the year 1721
was furnisbed in an dalxMate report of the Lords Commissioners for Trade and
PUatAtioiis. Those parts only which relate to the population, products, and
\ are here reprinted.
Copy of a RepresentatioM of the Lords Commissioners for Trade
and Plantations to the King upon the State of His Majesties
Colonies & Plantations on the Continent of North America,
dated September the 8^ 1721.
To the King's Most Exceilent Majesty.
May it please your Majesty.
In obedience to your Majesty's commands, we have prepared
the following state of your Majesty's Plantations on the Continent
of America; wherein we have distinguished their respective situations,
Governments, strengths and Trade, and have observed of what
importance their Commerce is to Great Britain, . . .
Your Majesty's Plantations on the Continent of America,
beginning from the North, are Nova Scotia, New Hampshire,
Mamchusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New York, New Jersey,
Pensylvania, Maryland, Virginia, & CaroHna. . . .
new HAMPSraRE
Lumber, Fish, Masts for the Royal Navy, & Turpentine are
Ukc dud produce of this Province; they build some ships, but not
•0 nuuiy since the last war as before; they have some mines, which
produce very good Iron, tho' but little of it hath been hitherto forged;
there are likewise great quantities of Stone, in which 'tis believed
there may be silver. The annual produce of these commodities is
very uncertain, the price falling & rising according to the demand
there b for them, seldom i-xcct-ding £50,000 per Aninmi of New
England room
This Provimc woui iicni]) & flax if proper encourage-
ment were given for it, \ , pU liad ^ood seed for the first sowing.
• Dmmtwk HUtkt to Uu Colonial History of the State of New York. Edited
by E. B. CrCiOsghiB (Albaoy, 1855), V, 591-630.
AGRICULTURE, INDUSTRY AND TRADE 43
They export their Lumber, & some part of their fish to the neigh-
bouring Governments of the West Indies, & to the Western Islands,
from whence they get their Wines. They Hkewise have sent some
Lumber, tar & Turpentine of late to this Kingdom, in exchange for
linnen & woolen manufactures; but they have some suppHes of this
kind from Ireland also, either directly or by way of other plantations.
Their best & most merchantable fish is exported to Portugal & Italy
& the produce of it generally remitted to this Kingdom except what is
returned in Salt for the fishery.
Their fishing is much increased since the Peace with France, but
the Lumber trade decreased, by reason of the low price it bears in
the West Indies, & the little encouragement there is to send it to this
Kingdom, because of the duties on that commodity here.
The Ships, trading directly from this Province to foreign parts,
are now very few, not exceeding 20 in number, but they have about
100 fishing vessels, & the number of sea faring men is near 400, tho'
many of them not settled Inhabitants there; -and there are no manu-
factures carried on in this Province. . . .
MASSACHUSETTS BAY
.... The products of this Country proper for the consumption
of this Kingdom, are timber, turpentine, tar & pitch, masts, pipe &
hogshead staves, whale fins & oil, & some furs. They supply Spain,
Portugal, & the West Indies with considerable quantities of fish &
Lumber. We are likewise informed, that they have mines of several
kinds, which might be wrought upon proper encouragement.
Their Trade to the foreign plantations in America consists chiefly
in the Exportation of Horses to Surinam, and (as we are informed) to
Martinico, & the other french Islands, which is a very great discour-
agement to the Sugar planters in the British Islands; for without
these supplies, neither the french nor the Dutch could carry on their
sugar works to any great degree; & in return for their Horses, they
receive Sugar, molasses & rum.
In this Province there are all sorts of Common Manufactures.
The Inhabitants have always worked up their own wool into coarse
Cloths, druggets, & serges; but these, as well as their homespun lin-
nen, which is generally half cotton, serve only for the use of the
meanest sort of people. A great part of the Leather used in the
Country is also manufactured among themselves; some hatters have
lately set up their trade in the principal Towns; & several Irish
families, not long since arrived, & settled, to the Eastward, make
44 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
good Linnen & diaf)er; however, the excessive price of labour enhances
the value of all their manufactures.
It b therefore to be presumed that necessity, & not choice, has
put them ufHjn erecting manufactures; not having sufficient commodi-
ties of their own to give in exchange for those they do receive already
from Great Britain; & the most natural method of curing this evil
would be to allow them all proper encouragement for the importation
of Naval Stores, & minerals of all kinds.
The branch of Trade which is of the greatest importance to them,
& which they are best enabled to carry on, is the building of Ships,
Sloops, &c. And according to our advices from thence, they have
annually launched from 140 to 160 vessels of all sorts, which at 40
tons one with another, amount to 6000 Tons; & altho' the greatest
fMirt are built for account of, or sold to the Merchants of this King-
dom, & in the plantations, nevertheless there belongs to this Province
alx)ut 190 sail, which may contain 8,000 tons, & are navigated with
about 1,100 men, besides 150 boats, with 600 men, employed in the
fisheries on their own Coast.
Their Iron works which were erected many years past, furnish
them with small quantities of iron for common use, but the iron
imported from this Kingdom, being esteemed much better, is generally
used in their shipping. . . .
RHODE ISLAND
.... As to the number of inhabitants in this Colony their
trade & state of their Government, we have but very imperfect
•coounts; & indeed the Misfeazances of this & most of the other
proprietary Governments are so numerous, that we shall not trouble
your Majesty with them in this place, but will take leave to give our
humble opinion concerning them in the concluding part of this
representation.
CONNECTICUT
.... This government is upon the same foot as Rhode Island,
under the same regula'^o.w of Government, & liable to the same
inconveniences.
MW YORK
.... The natural prtxiutc of this Country consists in provisions,
which are sent to the British Islands in the West Indies; in Horsis
•«t to Surinam, Cura^oa, & S* Thomas, & in Whale-oil, & peltry to
Uut Kingdom; betides some Naval -•---, whidi this Country is
AGRICULTURE, INDUSTRY AND TRADE 45
capable of producing in very great quantities, if proper measures
were taken for this purpose. . . .
This province could likewise furnish iron in great quantities. It
has some Copper & lead, but at a great distance from the British,
& amongst the Indian Settlements. There are Coal Mines in Long
Island, which has not yet been wrought.
The several Commodities, exported from this Kingdom to New
York, have at a medium of three years, commonly amounted to about
£50,000 a year. The imports from thence have not, upon the same
medium, risen higher than £16,000 a year; so that the balance in
favour of this Kingdom, as far as can be judged of it by the Custom
house accounts, has been upwards of £25,000 a year.
The Vessels belonging to this province are small, & not consider-
able in number; being employed only in carrying provisions^ to
the Southern Islands, and in the coasting trade to the Neighbouring
colonies on the Continent.
The number of the inhabitants in this province increases daily;
chiefly from New England, & from the North of Ireland. The
militia consists of 6000 men. . . .
NEW JERSEY
.... This province produces all sorts of grain or corn, the
inhabitants likewise breed all sorts of Cattle, in great quantities,
with which they supply the Merchants of New York & Philadelphia,
to carry on their trade, to all the American Islands; but were they
a distinct Government, (having very good harbours) merchants
1 [A later report (New York Col. Doc, V, 686.) explained more fully what
was included in this item, "provisions":]
The Staple Commodity of the Province is Flower & Bread, which is sent to all
Parts of the West Indies we are allowed to trade with, Besides Wheat, Pipe Staves
& a little Bees Wax to Madeira. We send likewise a considerable quantity of Pork,
Bacon, Hogshead Staves, some Beef Butter & a few Candles to the West Indies.
The great bulk of our Commoditys in proportion to their value, is the reason we
cannot Trade directly to the Spanish Coast as they do from the West Indies it being
necessary to employ armed vessels to prevent Injuries from the Spaniards & Pirates
but we sometimes send vessels into the Bays of Campechie & Honduras, to purchase
Logwood & we have it imported from thence frequently by Strangers. This
commodity is entirely exported again for England. . . .
Several of our Neighbours up on the continent cannot well subsist without
our assistance as to Provisions for we yearly send Wheat & Flower to Boston &
Road Island as well as to South Carolina tho in any great quantity Pensylvania
only rivals us in our Trade to the West Indies, but they have not that Credit in
their Manufactures that this Province has.
46 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
would be encouraged to settle amongst them, & they might become
A considerable trading people; whereas, at present, they have few
or no ships, but coasting vessels, & they are supplied from New York
9l Philadelphia with English Manufactures having none of their
own.
The Inhabitants daily increase in great numbers from New Eng-
land & Ireland; and befoie this increase, the miHtia consisted of
about 3000 men. . . .
PENNSYLVANIA
The natural produce of this Country is wheat, beef, pork,
& lumber. Their Trade consequently consists chiefly in the exporta-
tion of these to the several parts of the west Indies, & Madieras;
from whence; in return, they take rum, sugar. Cotton, Spanisli
money, & wine. They Hkewise build many Brigantines & Sloops
for sale; but having few or no manufactures of their own, they are
supplied therewith from Great Britain, to the yearly value of about
ao,ooo£. And as this province does greatly abound in iron, so
we have good grounds to believe, that, if proper encouragement
was given in Great Britain, to take off that, & their timber, the people
would thereby be diverted from the thoughts of setting up any manu-
factures of their own, & consequently the consumption of those of
Great Britain considerably advanced. For it must be observed, that
this Plantation is in a very flourishing condition; greatly increased in
its inhabitants; & altho' the informations we have received touching
their numbers, differ extremely, some computing them at about
60,000 whites k 5,000 blacks, & others not above half that number;
yet they all agree in their opinion, concerning the flourishing state of
thtt Colony, & that the produce of their commodities may well be
reckoned at ioo,ooo£ per Annum.
Four fifths of the inhabitants of this province being Quakers,
there is little care taken of their Military affairs. ...
MARYLAND
.... The number of Inhabitants was computed in the year
1704. to be 30,537 men. w«»m.-n Si children, & 4,475 slaves young &
old, in all 35,012.
In the year 17 10 was computed 34,796, whites, & 7,935 negroes,
in all 4J,74i.
And in the year 17 19. was computed 55,000 white inhabitants,
k ic 000 blacks, in all 80,000.
AGRICULTURE, INDUSTRY AND TRADE 47
From whence it appears, that the Inhabitants of this province
have increased to above double the number in 15 years, & altho'
some part of this increase may have been occasioned by the trans-
portation of the rebels from Preston, by the purchase of slaves, as
well as by the arrival of several convict persons, & of many poor
families, who have transported themselves from Ireland; yet it must
be allowed, that Maryland is one of the most flourishing provinces
upon the Continent of America. . . .
Tobacco is the staple commodity of this province of which about
30. or^35,ooo hogsheads are yearly exported to Great Britain. The
inhabitants export some tobacco to the other plantations, as also
grain, beef, pork, & lumber, for which they have in return rum &
sugar.
They likewise send some corn to the Madeiras for wine, but the
most part of the wine they have from thence is purchased by bills
of Exchange.
Whilst tobacco answers, in its price, the planter's labour, all
manufactures, & all other trade, that might arise from the product
of the Country are laid aside.
The Inhabitants wear the like cloathing, & have the same furni-
ture within their houses with those in this Kingdom. The Slaves
are cloathed with Cottons, Kerseys, flannel, & coarse linnens, all
imported; & it is computed that this province consumes of British
Manufactures to the value of £20,000 per annum.
No mines are yet discovered here, except iron, which are very
common, but not wrought, for want of a sufficient stock, & persons
of skill to engage in such an undertaking.
The number of ships belonging to this province, are only four small
Brigantines, & not more than 20 Sloops for the Sea; the inhabitants
not being inclined to navigation, but depending upon British bot-
toms for the exportation & importation of the bulk of their trade;
& there has been employed of late years above 100 sail of ships from
Great Britain.
VIRGINIA
.... The principal product of Virginia is tobacco; & in general
it's of a better quality than that of Maryland. Before the conclusion
of the last peace with France, the Virginia planters exported to this
Kingdom at least 30,000 hogsheads per Annum ; but about that time,
the trade declining, for want of foreign consumption, an Act was
passed in the 12*^^ of Her late Majesty's reign for encouraging the
48 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
tobacco trade, & yoiir Majesty hath been since graciously pleased
to give your Royal Assent to an Act for continuing the same. . . .
The other branches of the trade between this kingdom & Virginia
consist in pitch & tar, pipe & hogshead staves, skins & furrs, & a few
drugs. They also export to the other Plantations some small quanti-
ties of tobacco, provisions, & lumber; but their dependence is almost
iHioUy on the produce of tobacco. . . .
NORTH CAROLINA
.... There are great tracts of good land in this Province, & it
is a ver>' healthy country; but the situation renders it forever in-
capable of J3eing a place of considerable trade, by reason of a great
Sound near sixty miles over, that lies between the Coast & the Sea,
barred by a vast Chain of Sand-banks, so very shallow & shifting,
that sloops, drawing only five foot water, run great risk in crossing
them.
The little Commerce therefore driven to this Colony, is carried
on by very small Sloops, chiefly from New England; who bring them
Clothing & Iron ware, in exchange for their pork & Corn: but of
late, they have made small quantities of pitch & tar, which are first
exported to New England, & thence to Great Britain.
We are not thoroughly informed of the number of inhabitants;
but according to the best accounts we could get, the number of persons
in their tythables, or poll-tax, were not long since above 1600, of which
about one third were blacks. . . .
SOUTH CAROLINA
The trade of this Province, with respect to their own ship-
ping » not hitherto very considerable; the inhabitants not having
above 20 sail of their own, amounting to about 1500 ton; & as they
chiefly apply themselves to the plantation work, they have not many
fca faring men, but their trade is carried on by the Merchants of
Great Britain, who reap a considerable advantage thereby.
The commodities the people of Carolina take from Great Britain,
tie all manner of Cloathing, woollen linnen, iron ware, brass & pewter,
h all iort* of household goods, having no manufactures of their own;
k their loutheHy situation will make them always dependent on
Great Britain for a supply of these commodities, whose consumption
nay be computed at about £23,000 per Annum; besides the cost
of a oouidefable number of Negroes, with which the British Mer-
AGRICULTURE, INDUSTRY AND TRADE 49
chants have for some time furnished them yearly, taking their returns
in rice, & naval stores.
There is a small trade carried on between Carolina & the Madeiras
for wine; & the Commissioners of the Customs have a Surveyor
General, a Collector, a Comptroller, a Searcher, a Waiter, & a Naval
Officer, to put the laws of trade & Navigation in execution here:
But daily experience shews, that illegal trade is not to be prevented
in a proprietary Government.
The natural produce of this Country is Rice, pitch, tar, turpentine,
buck-skins, furs, corn, beef, pork, soap, myrtle-wax, candles, various
sorts of lumber, as Masts, cedar-boards, staves, shingles, and hoop-
poles; but the soil is thought capable of producing wine, oil, silk,
indigo, pot-ashes, iron, hemp, & flax.
The number of white inhabitants in this province has some time
since been computed at 9000; & the blacks at 12,000, But the fre-
quent massacres committed of late years by the neighbouring Indians,
at the instigation of the French & Spaniards, have diminished the
white men, whilest the manufacture of pitch & tar has given occasion
to increase the number of black slaves, who have lately attempted,
and were very near succeeding in a new revolution, which would
probably have been attended by the utter extirpation of all your
Majesty's subjects in this province; & therefore it may be neces-
sary for your Majesty's service, that the Governor should be in-
structed to propose some law to the Assembly there, for encouraging
the entertainment of more white servants for the future. . . .
THE CONSEQUENCE OF THE PLANTATION TRADE
Thus having gone through the several Colonies on the Continent,
in order to demonstrate the consequence their trade is of to Great
Britain; we have drawn out from the Custom House books an Ac-
count N° I. containing the total amount or value of all goods im-
ported from, & exported to the said Colonies, communibus Annis,
on a medium of three years from Christmas 17 14 to Christmas
1717. . . .
From this Account it will appear, that the plantations in America
take from hence yearly to the value of one million sterling, in British
products & Manufactures, & foreign goods.
And although the exports charged in this account to the several
Colonies on the continent, amount to no more than £431,027. I6^ 5*^
yet as the Continent has undoubtedly a great share in the General
50 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
article of entry to the West Indies, as well as in the articles of entry
lo Africa and the Madeiras, the exports to the Continent may well
be computed at £500,000.
But before we enter into the particular circumstances of the
plantation trade on the Continent, it will be necessary to ascertain
the principal commodities, wherein their trade consists, & how
!i they respectively amount to; which will appear, Ac-
i N** 2.
It may be observed from this Account, that the exports to the
Continent of America exceed the imports from thence about £200,000
per annimi; which debt falls upon the provinces to the Northward
of Mar\-land; who probably are enabled to discharge the same, b\-
the trade ihey are permitted to carry on in America, & to Europe,
in commodities not enumerated in the Acts of Trade, . . .
There still remains to be considered another great advantage
that arises to this Kingdom from the plantation trade, which is, the
constant employment it gives to our British Shipping. . . .
It is verv' probable, that the trade which is carried on between
England and the American plantations employs at least one fourth
part of the Shipping annually cleared from this kingdom.
And upon casting up the tonnage of the plantation products re-
exported in the year 1717, it appears there was employed near
half as much Shipping, in transporting these goods from hence to
Gennany, Holland, & other foreign countries, as was employed in
the trade directly from the British Colonies in America.
Consequently therefore it may be concluded, that about one
third part of the Shipping employed in the foreign trade of this
Kingdom is maintained by the plantation trade.
But notwithstanding the advantages, at present arising from the
Plantation trade, are so very considerable, it is not to be doubted,
but that they might still be rendered much more useful, if sufficient
encouiBganent were given to induce them to turn their industry to
the production of Naval Stores, of all kinds, & of such other commodi-
ties as our necessities require, & which are purchased by us with great
dkadvantage from foreign Countries; from whence this convenience,
amongst many others, would naturally result,— That the more North-
ern Colonics would be thereby enabled to pay their balance to England,
without lying under the necessity of carrying on a trade to foreign
pwts, in some respects detrimental to their mother Kingdom.
AGRICULTURE, INDUSTRY AND TRADE
51
No. I,
The total value of
Imports from
the
New England
New York
Pennsylvania
Virginia & Maryland
Carolina
The total value
Exports to
of the
£
65,016
22,607
5,051
s
7
16
7
d
2
4
00
£ s
139,269 14
50,314 6
20,176 14
d
6
6
2
92,675
250,994
38,906
10
10
16
6
6
I
209,760 15
198,276 4
22,987 16
2
9
6
No. 2.
The principal imports from New England, New York, Pennsyl-
vania, Virginia, Maryland, and Carolina, are as follows.
s d
In skins & furrs i7,340
Turpentine 12,082
Pitch and tar 34,99o
Train oil 7,680
Whalefins 3,679
Tobacco 236,588
Rice 19,206
Sugar, brown 9,834
Logwood 21,060
362,464
In all other Goods 20,112
The total import according
to the aforesd Genl account. . 382,576
But the Tobacco being over-
valued about 80,000
The said import cannot
amount to more than 302,576
14
10
Products of the Indiai
19
5
00
00
18
7
of the sd Plantations
14
3
18
I
18
4
7
3
of foreign Plantations
6
4
of Campeche
17
I
00
00
17
I
per annum
00
00
17
I
per annum
52
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
No. 3
And the principal exports to the said provinces are as follows.
In British Manulacture & Products,
Woonn Manufactures
SBk wfoui^t & thrown
UoneniftsaOcloth..
Cordage
Gunpcywder
heather wrought, & saddles
Brui ft copper wrought
Iron wrought & naib
Lend ft shot
Pewter
In many other goods
In Foreign Goods.
CaOkoes
Prohibited East India Goods
Wrought SUks
Iron ft Hemp ...
In other foreign goods
Foreign Goods
British Goods. .
The laid Exports amounts to according to the aforesaid
feocral account (per annum)
But at it has been always mentioned, the total export might
£
s
d
147,438
II
7
18,468
7
I
11,464
9
00
11,284
5
9
2,392
15
5
15,161
12
6
2,565
6
7
35,631
13
6
2.850
9
3
3,687
6
II
43,941
5
6
294,886
3
I
86,413
00
00
10,102
4
00
10,523
12
9
1,189
II
I
6,152
5
II
21,760
19
9
136,141
13
6
294,886
3
I
431,027
probably amount to at least (per annum) 500,000
WhitehaU
Sep' 8. 1721
All which is most humbly submitted.
J. Chetwynd.
P. Doeminique.
M. Bladen.
E. Ashe.
AGRICULTURE, INDUSTRY AND TRADE 53
II. Extractive Industries
A. Products of the Forest, 1650 ^
To the pioneer settler the clearing of the densely wooded land presented a task
of overwhelming proportions. While we regard the forests today as a source of
wealth which we are beginning to conserve more carefully, to the colonist they were
a hindrance to be got rid of as soon and as thoroughly as possible. The author
of the tract from which the following extract is taken was trying to persuade settlers
to emigrate to America, so he pointed out some of the ways in which the forest
products could be turned to account in the process of clearing the land.
The objection, that the Countrey is overgrowne with Woods, and
consequently not in many Yeares to bee penetrable for the Plough,
carries a great feeblenesse with it. For there are an immense quan-
tity of Indian fields cleared already to our hand by the Natives, which
till wee grow over populous may every way be abundantly sufficient,
but that the very clearing of ground carries an extraodinary benefit
with it, I will make apparent by these following Reasons.
I. If wee consider the benefit of Pot-ashes growne from ten to
fifty pound in the Tunne, within these twenty Yeares, and in all
probability likely to encrease by reason of interdicting Trade be-
twixt us and the Muscovite, from whence we used to supply our
selves; We shall finde the employment of that very Staple will raise
a considerable summe of Money, and no man so imployed can (if
industrious) make his labour less than one hundred pound, per annum:
For if wee consider that those who labour about this in England give
twelve pence the bushell for Ashes, if wee consider to how many
severall parts of the Countrey they are compelled to send man and
horse before they can procure any quantity to fall to worke upon;
if wee consider some of the thriftiest, and wise, and understanding
men, sell Wood on purpose for this Commodity, and yet notwith-
standing this Brigade of difficulties finde their Adventures and La-
bours answered with a large returne of profit, wee who have all these
things already at our owne doore without cost, may with a confi-
dence grounded upon reason expect an advantage much greater, and
clearer profit.
Nor can wee admit in discretion, that a large quantity of those
should not finde a speedy Market, since the decay of Tymber is
a defect growne universall in Europe, and the Commodity such a
necessary Staple, that no civill Nation can be conveniently without it.
^ Virginia. By E. W. Gent (London, 1650). In Force, Tracts and Other
Papers (Washington, 1844, 4 vols.), Ill, no. xl, 13-14.
:^4 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
Nor are Pipeslaves and Clapboard a despicable commodity, of
which one man may with ease make fifteen thousand yearely, which
in the countrey it selfe are sold for 4 1. in the Canaries for twenty
pound the thousand, and by this means the labour of one man will
yedd him 60 1. ^ annum, at the lowest Market. If all this be not
sufficient to remove the incumbrance of Woods, the Saw mill may be
taken into consideration, which is in every respect highly beneficiall
by this Timber for building houses, and shipping may be more
speedily prepared, and in greater quantity by the labour of two or
three men, then by a hundred hands after the usuall manner of
sawing.
The Plankes of Walnut-trees for Tables or Cubbords, Cedar and
Cypresse, for Chests, Cabinets, and the adorning magnificent build-
ings, thus prepared will be easily transported into England, and
sold at a ver>' considerable value.
But that in which there will be an extraordinary use of our woods
b the Iron mills, which if once erected will be an undecaying Staple,
and of this forty servants will by their labour raise to the Adven-
turer foure thousand pound yearely: Which may easily be appre-
\ ■ ''' wee consider the deerenesse of Wood in England, where
I: landing this great clog of difficulty, the Master of the Mill
gaines so much yearely, that he cannot but reckon himselfe a provi-
dent Saver.
B. Naval Stores in South Carolina, i6gg ^
Edwanl Randolph was sent over to America by the king as a special agent to
report on the acts of trade. In this reix)rt he urges the encouragement of naval
itflret in South Carolina.
.... My Lords, I did formerly present Your Lordships with
proposals for supplying England with Pitch & Tar, Masts & all o""
Naval Stores from New England. I observed when I were at York
in Sept', last, abundance of Tar bro^ down Hudson's River to be
told at New York, as also Turpentine & Tar in great quantities from
the Colony of Connecticut, I was told if they had encouragement
they could load several Ships yearly for England. But since my
arrival here I find I am come into the only place for such commodi-
ties upon the Continent of America; some persons have offered to
deliver in Charlcstown Bay upon their own account 1000 Barrels of
* A Skekk of the llislory of South Carol I W. J. Rivers. (Charleston,
AGRICULTURE, INDUSTRY AND TRADE 55
Pitch and as much Tar, others greater quantities provided they
were paid for it in Charles Town in Lyon Dollars passing here at
5^. p^ piece, Tar at 8^ p'". Barrel, and very good Pitch at I2^ p"". Bar-
rel, & much cheaper if it once became a Trade. The season for making
those Commodities in this Province being 6 mo^. longer than in
Virginia and more Northern Plantations; a planter can make more
tar in any one year here with 50 slaves than they can do with double
the number in those places, their slaves here living at very easy
rates and with few clothes.
C. Shipbuilding in Massachusetts, 160^-1^24 ^
There are many references in contemporary writings to the growth of ship-
building in New England during the colonial period, but nowhere do we find a
description of this industry. Thus we read in Rev. William Hubbard's quaint
General History of New England, written about 1680, that "the people of New
England at this time [1646] began to flourish much in building of ships and
trafficking abroad, and had prospered very well in those affairs," but no further
details are given. The following extract brings together much of the available
information on this subject. The author was a captain in the United States
navy.
Undoubtedly the first vessel of size sufficient to navigate the
ocean, launched from the shores of New England, was "a faire pinnace
of thirty tons,''called the Virginia, which, according to Strachey,
was built by the Popham colony at the mouth of the Kennebec in
1607, thirteen years before the landing of the pilgrims at Plymouth,
and which made a successful voyage across the Atlantic the same
year.
Twenty-four years after this, on the 4th of July, 1631, was launched
the Blessing of the Bay, the first vessel built in the colony of
Plymouth. . . .
Ten years later, viz., Jan. 24, 1641, Edward Banks launched at
Plymouth a bark of 40 or 50 tons, estimated to cost £200, and which
is recorded as the first vessel of size built in that colony. Hence the
Blessing of the Bay must have been of less tonnage. . . .
The importance of ship-building to the colony, immediately
following the launch of Bang's vessel, received the attention of
the pilgrim fathers, and accordingly on the 4th of October, 1641, the
same year that witnessed her launch, we find them enacting the
following law:
^ Early Ship-building in Massachusetts. By George Henry Preble. In The
New-England Historical and Genealogical Register and Antiquarian Journal
(Boston, 1869), XXIII, 38-41; XXV, 15-16, 127.
56 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
"Whereas the building of ships is a business of great importance
for the common good, and therefore suitable care ought to be taken
that it be well performed, according to the commendable course of
England and other places: It is therefore ordered by this court and
the authority thereof; that when any ship is to be built within this
jurisdiction, or any vessel above thirty tons, the owner, or builder in
his abfience, shall before they begin to plank, repair to the governor
or (teputy governor, or any two magistrates, upon the penalty of ten
pounds, who shall apfHjint some able man to survey the work and
workmen from time to time as is usual in England, and the same so
appointed shall have such liberty and power as belongs to his
office. . . .
"And those viewers shall have power to cause any bad timber,
or other insufficient work or material to be taken out and amended
at the charge of them through whose default it grows." ^ . . .
These vessels were all ships of size for those days, though the\
would be but the merest cockle-shells of our times. We of the present
generation cannot realize the little cock boats in which navigators
traversed the ocean between two and three centuries ago. Could
the navigators of those days revisit the earth, they would be amazed
at the improvements in size, construction, comfor^ and security of
the ships of our time. Hume relates that, in 1582, of twelve hundred
and thirty-two vessels belonging to the kingdom of Great-Britain,
but two hundred and seventeen were over eighty tons burthen. A
vessel of forty tons, he says, was considered a large vessel, and in
1587 there were not five vessels in all England whose size exceeded
200 tons. Only one of the vessels which composed the squadron of
Columbus, in 1492, had a deck, and the remainder, according to
Irving, were not superior to the smallest class of modern coasting
vessels. On his third voyage, when coasting the gulf of Para, Colum-
bus complained of the size of his ship, it being nearly 100 tons burthen.
The Mayflower, which in 1620 brought over the Pilgrim fathers, was
but 180 tons, and |he Half Moon, as the boat in which Henrick
Hudson discovered New- York bay in 1609 was called, was but 80
In 1676, there had been, according to Hutchinson, constructed in
Boston and iu vicinity, and then belonged to ports in its neighbor-
• An€Umi Urn and Charkr of MassachuseUs Bay, published by order of the
^* Court. vL oi 1814, p. 189.
AGRICULTURE, INDUSTRY AND TRADE 57
30 vessels of between 100 and 250 tons,
200 " " " 50 " 100 "
200 " " " 30 " 50 "
300 " " " 6 " 10 "
In 1 7 14-17, Massachusetts had 492 vessels, with an aggregate of
25,406 tons, and employing 3,493 seafaring men. . . .
There is no subject connected with the first century of the history
of New-England, about which so little is known as of the small ves-
sels employed in navigating its waters. Of the small craft employed
by our ancestors in their coasting, fishing and trading voyages, our
information is hardly sufficient even to enable the imagination to
represent satisfactorily their form and appearance when under sail.
We know that they had shallops, sloops, pinnaces, barks and ketches;
but concerning the masts, spars, rigging and sails of these vessels, it
may be said we know nothing . . .
In 1698 Lord Bellomont says: "Last year I examined the Registers
of all the vessels in the three provinces of my government; and found
there then belonged to the town of Boston 25 ships from 100 tons
to 300; ships about 100 tons and under, 38; brigantines, 50; ketches,
13; and sloops, 67; in all, 194 vessels. To New-Hampshire at that
time II ships of good burthen, 5 brigantines, 4 ketches and 4 sloops."
. . . ''I believe I may venture to say there are more good vessels
belonging to the town of Boston, than to all Scotland and Ireland,
unless one should reckon the small craft, such as herring boats." ^ . . .
Various attempts were made to counteract ship-building in the
province. Oct. 19, 1724, a petition was laid before the Lords of
Plantations by sixteen master builders, against the encouragement
of ship-building in New-England. Of their reasons, one was, that
their journeymen were drawn to this country; and another, that
there would not be a sufficiency of ships for the royal navy, in case
of need. The petitioners belonged to London.
D. Fur Trade Gained by the French, 7755 2
With the increase of population and the killing off of the fur-bearing animals
in the region east of the Alleghanies, the French were able to secure to themselves
^ Bellomont Papers, p. 790. — See Provincial Papers, New-Hampshire. Vol.
II. Part I. 1628-1722.
2 Observations on the late and present conduct of the French, with regard to their
encroachments upon the British Colonies in North America. By William Clarke
(Boston, 1755), 14-16.
58 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
the Urgcr put of the fur trade with the Indians in the Mississippi country. The
rivmlr>' over the fur trade was indeed one of the immediate causes which led to the
French and Indian War in 1 756.
But to return from these occasional Remarks, and to point out
the Consequences of the present Measures of the French^ if they are
suffered to pursue them:
The first and most immediate will be the engrossing the whole
i-urr and Pelt Trade. The Furrs and Pelts imported into England^
have been commuted to amount to about 90,000 /. Sterling perAnnunty
besides what are used in the Plantations, which is no inconsiderable
Quantity, but I believe greatly exceed that Sum. What Part is
imported from North- America^ and what from the Northern Parts
of Europe^ I cannot tell. The whole Indian Trade of North- America
b carried on entirely by Barter; and that chiefly, and indeed almost
wholly for Strouds, DuflSls, Blankets, and other Manufactures of
Greal- Britain. . . .
The Pelts and Furrs imported into France, amounted some Years
ago to no less than 135,000 /. Sterling per Annum; and since that
Time the French Trade in those Commodities has been continuall\-
encreasing, whilst that of the English has been diminishing; and in
a little Time will, very probably, nay, must necessarily be entirely
lost to the English and gained by the French, if the latter are suf-
fered to continue possessed of their present Encroachments, and to
strengthen themselves in them.
t. I'lsnuig in New England, 1624 ^
That ihc wealth of the colonists of New England lay in the fishing industry
nuber than in cultivating a sterile soil or in trying to develop artificial industries
wa« cmrly leen by such a shrewd observer as Captain John Smith. All the early
writers agree in describing the enormous quantities of fish in American waters, and
the following extract probably does not exaggerate the situation.
The main staple from hence to be extracted for the present, to pro-
duce the rest, is fish, which howbeit may seem a mean and a base
commodity, yet who will but truly take the pains and consider the
leqtid, I think will allow it well worth the labour. . . .
In March, April, May, and half June, here is cod in abundance;
in Mmy, June, July, and August, mullet and sturgeon, whose roes
dooMnake caviary and puttargo, herring if any desire them; I have
• CMMTotf IHtlorie of Viriinia, New Englottd and the Summer Isles, 1 584-1624.
By Capuin John Smith (London, 1624). In Pinkerton, Voyages and Travels,
Xlll. 913,
AGRICULTURE, INDUSTRY AND TRADE 59
taken many out of the bellies of cods, some in nets; but the savages
compare the store in the sea with the hairs of their heads; and surely
there are an incredible abundance upon this coast. In the end of
August, September, October and November, you may have cod again
to make core-fish or poor-john; hake you may have when the cod
fails in summer, if you will fish in the night, which is better than cod.
Now each hundred you take here is as good as two or three hundred
in Newfoundland; so that half the labour in hooking, sphtting and
towing is saved : and you may have your fish at what market you will,
before they have any in Newfoundland, where their fishing is chiefly
but in June and July, where it is here in March, April, May, Septem-
ber, October, and November, as is said; so that by reason of this
plantation, the merchants may have their freiglj^t both out and home,
which yield an advantage worth consideration. Your core-fish you
may in like manner transport as you see cause, to serve the ports in
Portugal, as Lisbon, Avera, Porta-Port, and divers others (or what
market you please), before your islanders return: they being tied
to the season in the open sea, and you having a double season, and
fishing before your doors, may every night sleep quietly ashore with
good cheer, and what fires you will, or when you please, with your
wives and family: they only and their ships in the main ocean, that
must carry and contain all they use, besides their freight. The
mullets here are in that abundance you may take them with nets
sometimes by hundreds, where at Cape Blank they hook them; yet
those are but a foot and a half in length; these two, three, r four, as
oft I have measured, which makes me suspect they are some other
kind of fish, though they seem the same, both in fashion and good-
ness. Much salmon some have found up the rivers as they have
passed, and here the air is so temperate as all these at any time may
be preserved. Now, young boys and girls, savages, or any other,
be they never such idlers, may turn, carry, or return a fish, without
either shame, or any great pain: he is very idle, that is past twelve
years of age, and cannot do so much; and she is very old, that cannot
spin a thread to make engines to catch a fish.
F. Advantages of American Fisheries, I'/go^
The dose proximity to the United States of the Newfoundland Banks, where
the best fishing was to be had, gave the American fisheries an initial advantage
^ Statistical Annals . . . of the United States of America. By Adam Seybert.
(Philadelphia, 18 18), 335-6.
6o READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
over all competitors excq>t the Canadians, but other factors which are enumerated
in the following extract, nuuie us probably the foremost fishing nation in the world
at tlie end of the eighteenth century.
It was supposed, that the people of the United States
possessed many advantages over those of other nations; in some
rfSfjccts this was true; and as such, the Secretary of State [Thomas
Jcflfcrson], enumerated the following; viz.
1. The neighbourhood of the great fisheries, which permits our
fishermen to bring home their fish, to be salted by their wives and
chfldren.
2. The shore fisheries, so near at hand as to enable vessels to run
into port in a storm, and to lessen the risk, for which distant nations
must p>ay an insurance.
3. The winter fisheries, which, like household manufactures,
employ portions of time which would otherwise be useless.
4. The smallness of the vessels which the shortness of the voyage
enables us to employ; and which, consequently, requires but a small
capital.
5. The cheapness of our vessels; which do not cost above the
half of the Baltic fir vessels, computing price and duration.
6. Their excellence as sea boats; which decreases the risk, and
facilitates the returns.
7. The superiority of oui mariners, in skill, activity, enterprise,
sobriety, and order.
8. The cheapness of provisions.
9. The cheapness of casks; which, of itself, is said to be equal to
an extra profit of 15 per cent.
in. Manufacturing Industries
A. Colonial Manufactures, iyj2 ^
The Eo^Ul Board of Trade and Plantations every few years sent a long list of
"'^ 10 the colooUl governors concerning, among other things, the trade and
'"*••'■• ^ the O^nies. The answers to these questions probably constit ut c
vahiable tource of mformation as to the commerce and industrial devcloi)-
l ct the various colonies. A much condensed account of colonial manufactures
for the year 1 7j> b herewith presented.
Pursuant to an order of the British House of Commons, directed
totheLofdi Commissioners of Trade and Plantations, in the latter
» M^ptrt 0f lk$ Lords Commissioners for Trade and Plantations to the House of
■— — I7J*. In Aadenon, An Historical and Chronological Deduction of the i
' (4 roA., London, 1787), III. 100-4.
AGRICULTURE, INDUSTRY AND TRADE 6i
end of the last or the beginning of this same year 1732, relating to
the dispute still subsisting between the sugar colonies and the north-
ern continental colonies of America; the said board reported, with
respect to any laws made, manufactures set up, or trade carried on
there, detrimental to the trade, navigation, or manufactures of Great
Britain, as follows, viz. . . .
"That in New England, New York, Connecticut, Rhode Island,
Pennsylvania, and in the county of Somerset in Maryland, they had
fallen into the manufacture of woollen cloth and linen cloth, for
the use of their own families only.
"For, first. The product of those colonies being chiefly stock,"
i. e. cattle, "and grain, the estates of the inhabitants depended wholly
on farming, which could not be managed without a, certain quan-
tity of sheep, so that their wool would be entirely lost were not
their servants employed during the winter in manufacturing it for
the use of their families.
"Secondly, That flax and hemp being likewise easily raised, the
inhabitants manufactured them into a coarse sort of cloth bags,
traces, and halters, for their horses; which they found did more
service than those they had from any part of Europe. That, how-
ever, the height of wages and high price of labour in general
in America rendered it impracticable for people there to manufac-
ture their linen cloth at less than twenty per cent, more than the
rate in England, or woollen cloth at less than fifty per cent, dearer
than that which is exported from hence for sale. It were to be wished,
that some expedient might be fallen upon to divert their thoughts
from undertakings of this nature: so much the rather, because
those manufactures, in process of time, may be carried on in a greater
degree, unless an early stop be put to their progress, by employing
them in naval stores. ., . .
"I. New Hampshire.
"The governor, in his answer, said. That there were no settled
manufactures in that province, and that their trade principally
consisted in lumber and fish.
"II. Massachusetts s Bay, in New England.
"The governor informed us, that in some parts of this province,
the inhabitants worked up their wool and flax into an ordinary
coarse cloth, for their own use; but did not export any. That the
greatest part of both woollen and linen cloathing worn in this prov-
63 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
incc was imported from Great Britain, and sometimes from Ireland.
But, considering the excessive price of labour in New England,
the merchants could afford what was imported cheaper than what
was made in that country.
"That there were also a few hatters set up in the maritime towns:
and that the greater part of the leather used in that country was
manufactured amongst themselves. That there had been for man\'
years some iron-works in that province, which had afforded the
people iron for some of their necessary occasions; but that the iron
imported from Great Britain was esteemed much the best, and wholly
used by the shipping. And that the iron works of that province
were not able to supply the twentieth part of what was necessary
for the use of the country.
"in. New York.
"That they had no manufactures in that province that deserved
mentioning; their trade consisting chiefly in furs, whale-bone, oil,
pitch, tar, and provisions.
"IV. New Jersey,
"No manufactures here that deserve mentioning: their trade
hflntr < liicfly in provisions exported to New York and Pennsylvania.
/Pennsylvania,
"Its chief trade lay in the exportation of provisions and lumber;
having no manufactures established; their cloathing and utensils
for their houses being all imported from Great Britain.
"VI. From New Hampshire, further advices, viz.
"That the woollen manufacture of this province is much less
than formerly; the common lands on which the sheep used to feed,
Ix'ing now divided into particular properties, and the people almost
wholly doathed with woollen from Great Britain. That the manu-
facturing of flax into linen (some coarser, some finer) daily increased
by the great resort of people from Ireland thither, who are well
skilled in that business. And that the chief trade of this province
continued, as for many years past, m the exportation of naval
stores, lumber, and fisli
"Vn. LAter accouhi^ iumi Massachusetts BaVy in New Eng-
buid, viz.
"The aiiembly have voted a bounty of thirty shillings for every
piece of durl ..r r.r.nw.w ... 1.,. ^,...1,. jp ||^j^ jmu'ince. — - Some other
AGRICULTURE, INDUSTRY AND TRADE 63
manufactures are carried on there; as the making of brown Hol-
lands, for womens wear; which lessens the importation of calicoes,
and some other sorts of East India goods. — They also make some
small quantities of cloth made of linen and cotton, for ordinary
shirting and sheeting. — By a paper-mill, set up three years ago,
they make to the value of two hundred pounds yearly. — There are
also several forges for making of bar iron, and some furnaces for
cast iron, or hollow wares, and one sHtting mill: — and a manu-
facture of nails.
"The governor writes, concerning the woollen manufacture, that
the country people who used formerly to make most of their cloath-
ing out of their own wool, do not now make a third part of what
they wear, but are mostly cloathed with British manufactures. —
The governor (Belcher) by some of his letters of an older date,
in answer to our annual queries, writes, that there are some few
copper mines in this province, but so far distant from water car-
riage, and the ore so poor, that it is not worth the digging. — The
Surveyor General of his Majesty's woods writes, that they have
in New England six furnaces and nineteen forges for making of
iron: — and that in this province many ships are built for the French
and Spaniards, in return for rum, melasses, wines, and silk, which
they truck there by connivance. — Great quantities of hats are
made in New England, of which the Company of Hatters of London
have likewise lately complained to us. — That great quantities
of those hats are exported to Spain, Portugal, and our West India
islands. — They also make all sorts of iron-work for shipping. —
That there are several still-houses and sugar bakers established
in New England.
"VIII. Later advices from New York, viz.
"There are no manufactures here that can affect the manufactures
of Great Britain. — There is yearly imported into New York a very
large quantity of the woollen manufactures of this kingdom, for
their cloathing, which, 'as the President of the Council of this
province writes,' they would be rendered incapable to pay for,
and would be reduced to the necessity of making for themselves,
if they were prohibited from receiving from the foreign sugar colonies,
the money, rum, sugar, melasses, cocoa, cotton-wool, &c. which
they at present take in return for provisions, horses, and lumber,
the produce of that province and of New Jersey; of which, he
affirms, the British sugar colonies do not take off above one-half.
64 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
But the Company of Hatters of London have smce informed us, that
haU are manufactured in great quantities in this province.
"EX. Sew Jersey.
"No particular returns from this province.
**X. From Pennsylvania, later advices, viz.
"The deputy-governor writes, that he does not know of any
trade carried on in that province that can be injurious to this king-
dom: and that they do not export any woollen or linen manufac-
tures: all that they make, which are of a coarse sort, being for
their own use. We are further informed, that in this province
are built many brigan tines and small sloops, which they sell to
the West Indies.
"XI. Rhode Island.
"The governor informs us, in answer to our queries, that there
are iron mines there; but not a fourth part iron enough to serve
their owti use. But he takes no notice of any sort of manufactures
established there.
"Xn. Connecticut.
"No return from the governor of this province." . . . "But,"
says thb report of the Board of Trade, "we find by some accounts,
that the produce of this colony is timber, boards, all sorts of English
grain, hemp, flax, sheep, black cattle, swine, horses, goats, and to-
bacco. — That they export horses and lumber to the West Indies,
and receive in return sugar, salt, melasses, and rum. — We like-
wise find, that their manufactures are very inconsiderable; the
people there being generally employed in tillage; some few in
tanning, shoe-making, and other handicrafts; others in building,
joiners, taylors and smiths work, without which they could not
subsist."
"No report is made concerning Carolina, the Bahama, nor the
Bermuda isles: and as for Newfoundland, it is scared \- to be railed
a plantatbn, and Hudson's Bay not at all
"From the foregoing state," continues the rei)ori, ii is observ-
able that there arc more trades carried on and manufactures set
up in the provinces on the continent of America to the northward
of Virginia, prejudicial to the trade and manufactures of Great
Britain, particularly in New England, than in any other of the
British cobnies; which is not to be wondered at; for their climate,
J
AGRICULTURE, INDUSTRY AND TRADE 65
soil, and produce, being pretty near the same with ours, they have
no staple commodities of their own growth to exchange for our
manufactures; which puts them under greater necessity, as well
as under greater temptation of providing for themselves at home:
to which may be added, in the charter governments, the little
dependence they have upon their mother-country, and consequently
the small restraints they are under in any matters detrimental
to her interests.
"And therefore, we would humbly beg leave to report and submit
to the wisdom of this Honourable House, the substance of what
we formerly proposed in our report on the silk, linen, and woollen
manufactures herein before recited; namely, whether it might not
be expedient to give those colonies proper encouragements for turn-
ing their industry to such manufactures and products as might
be of service to Great Britain, and more particularly to the pro-
duction of all kinds of naval stores.
'^Whitehall, Feb. 15, 1731-2. Paul Dockminique, &c."
B. Few Manufactures in New York, iyj2 ^
The following extract is a good example of a report from a governor who was
friendly to the colonists and who minimized the growth of manufacturing in the
colonies and the infraction of the acts of trade. Cosby was governor of New York.
My Lords, ... New York. i8. Dec' 1732.
I acknowledge the receipt of your LordPP^ to me of the i6*^ of June
last, and in pursuance of His Maj*^'^ directions to Your LordPP^'s Board
have made the strictest enquiry in respect to Manufacturers sett up,
and Trade carryed on in this Province of New York and can discover
none that may in any way affect or prejudice the Trade, Navigation
and Manufactures of the Kingdom of Great Brittain; . . . The In-
habitants here are more lazy and unactive that the world generally
supposes, and their manufacture extends no further then what is con-
sumed in their own famillys, a few coarse Lindsey Woolseys for cloath-
ing, and linen for their own wear; the hatt makeing trade here seemed
to promise to make the greatest advances to the prejudice of Great
Brittain, but that the Parliament having already taken into their con-
sideration, needs no more mention, whatever new springs up that may
in the least affect and prejudice the Trade or Navigation of Great
1 Documents relative to the Colonial History of the State of New York. Edited
by E, B. O'Callaghan (Albany, 1855), V, 937-8.
66 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
Brittain shall be narrowly inspected and Annual returns of Your
Lord***" Querries constantly sent — In the mean time I have the
honour to be with the greatest respect imaginable — My Lords,
Your Lord^P* most obedient
and most humble servant.
(signed). W Cosby
C. Manufactures in New York, lydy ^
TTic slight development of manufacturing establishments and the difficulties
wfaidi the manager of such enterprises had to cope with in the uncertainty of
Ubor and the competition of the cheaper and better English goods are clearly
biougfal out in this report of Governor H. Moore of New York to the Lords of
Trade.
There is a small Manufactory of Linen in this City under the
Conduct of one Wells, and supported chiefly by the Subscriptions of
a set of men who call themselves the Society of Arts and Agriculture.
No more than fourteen Looms are employed in it, and it was estab-
lished in order to give Bread to several poor families which were a
considerable charge to the City, and are now comfortably supported
by their own daily Labour in spinning of Flax. It does not appear,
that there is aay established fabric of Broad cloth here; and som_e
poor Weavers from Yorkshire, who came over lately in expectation
of being engaged to make Broad cloths, could find no Employment.
But there is a general Manufactory of Woollen carried on here, and
consists of two sorts, the first a coarse cloth entirely woollen J of a
yard wide; and the other a Stuff which they call Linsey Woollsey.
The Warp of this Linen and the Woof Woollen; and a very small
quantity of it is ever sent to market. Last year when the Riots and
Disorders here were at their height, on the occasion of the Stamp
Act, these manufactures were greatly boasted of, and the Quantity
then made greatly magnified by those, who were desirous of dis-
tinguishing themselves as American Patriots, and would wear nothing
ehe; they were sometimes sold for three times their value; Wut the
manufacturers themselves shewed, that they had more good sense
the persons who employed them; for they never cloathed
Ives with the work of their own hands, but readily brou^'ht
it to market, and selling it at an extravagant price there, ho\x\i}\\
English cloth for themselves and their families. The custom of
making tiiese coarse cloths in private families prevails throughout
» D»€mmmt$ rtiaUwt lo Ike Colonial History of New York. Edited by E. H.
(XCtlhihM. (Albany, 1856-1887). VII, 888-9.
AGRICULTURE, INDUSTRY AND TRADE 67
the whole Province, and almost in every house a sufficient quantity
is manufactured for the use of the Family, without the least design
of sending any of it to market. This I had an opportunity of seeing
during the late Tour I made, and had the same Accounts given me
by all those persons, of whom I made any enquiries, for every house
swarms with children, who are set to work as soon as they are able
: to Spin and card; and as every family is furnished with a Loom,
' the Itinerant Weavers who travel about the Country, put the finish-
ing hand to the work.
There is a Manufactory of Hats in this City, which is very con-
siderable; for the Hats are not so good as those made in England,
and are infinitely dearer. Under such Disadvantages as these it
is easy to imagine with what difiiculty it is supported, and how short
the duration of it is like to be; the Price of Labour is so great in this
part of the World that it will always prove the greatest obstacle to
any manufactures attempted to be set up here, and the genius of the
People in a Country where every one can have Land to work upon
leads them so naturally into Agriculture that it prevails over every
\ other occupation. There can be no stronger Instances of this, than
I in the servants Imported from Europe of different Trades; as soon
as the Time stipulated in their Indentures is expired, they immedi-
ately quit their Masters and get a small tract of Land in settling
which for the first three or four years they lead miserable lives, and
in the most abject Poverty; but all this is patiently borne and sub-
mitted to with the greatest cheerfulness, the Satisfaction of being
Land holders smooths every difficulty, and makes them prefer this
manner of living to that comfortable subsistance which they could
procure for themselves and their families by working at the Trades
in which they were brought up.
The Master of a Glass-house; which was set up here a few years
ago, now a Bankrupt, assured me that his ruin was owing to no
other cause than being deserted in this manner by his servants,
which he had Imported at a great expence; and that many others
had suffered and been reduced as he was by the same Kind of Mis-
fortune.
The little Foundry lately set up near this Town, for making small
Iron Potts is under the direction of a few private persons, and as yet
very inconsiderable.
As to the Foundaries which M'" Hansenclaver has set up in the
different parts of this Country, I do not mention them, as he will be
able to give your Lordships a full account of them and of the progress
68 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
he has already made; I can only say that I think this Province is
under very great obligations to him for the large Sums of Money he
has paid out here in promoting the cultivation of Hemp and introdu-
cing the valuable manufactures of Iron and Pot-Ash.
D. Domestic Manufacturing in New England, iy6i ^
Many of the industries which are now carried on in factories and which produce
by machiner)' in large quantities for sale in a market, were at one time carried on
within the household by hand methods and for family consumption. The so-called
domestic manufactures of the colonies were of this kind, and were widespread,
eapecudly in New England and the middle colonies. The English government
never objected to domestic production for family use, though it did forbid manu-
bcturing textiles, hats, or iron and steel for sale. Consequently the colonists
throughout the entire colonial period carried on these household industries, of
which the textile industry was the most important.
They are almost the only one of our colonies which have much
of the woollen and linen manufactures. Of the former they have
nearly as much as suffices for their own cloathing. It is a close and
strong, but a coarse and stubborn sort of cloth. A number of Pres-
byterians from the North of Ireland, driven thence, as it is said, by
the severity of their landlords, from an affinity in religious sentiments
chose New-England as their place of refuge. Those people brought
with them their skill in the linen manufactures, and meeting with
very large encouragement, they exercised it to the great advantage
of this colony. At present they make large quantities, and of a very
good kind; their principal settlement is in a town, which in compli-
ment to them is called Londonderry. Hats are made in New-England,
which, in a clandestine way, find a good vent in all the other colonies.
The setting up of these manufactures has been in a great measure a
matter necessary to them ; for as they have not been properly encour-
aged in some staple commodity, by which they might communicate
with their mother country, while they were cut off from all other re-
sources, they must either have abandoned the country, or have found
means of employing their own skill and industry to draw out of it
the necessaries of life. The same necessity, together with their
convenience for building and manning ships, has made them the
carriera for the other colonies.
> *•
•rt^MMi SWlmtiOi in America. By Edmund Burke (.London, 1701), II,
AGRICULTURE, INDUSTRY AND TRADE 6q
TRADE
I. Trade between England and British Colonies in America
An Early View of Colonial Trade, ijzg ^
The difference between the southern and northern colonies in their relation to
English trade is clearly indicated in this selection. The tobacco plantations and
other southern colonies sent to England staples which she desired for herself or
which furnished the basis for a lucrative trade with Europe — "the surest way of
enriching this Kingdom." The northern colonies, on the other hand, while they
bought largely from England, could send few of their own products in return and
were therefore forced to secure the means of payment by trade with other countries,
or to manufacture for themselves. Consequently the southern colonies were pre-
ferred during the earlier colonial period, when the colonies were regarded chiefly as a
source of materials. The writer was a Mercantilist, who believed in the regulation
of trade and industry by the government.
Chap. XV.
TRADE between England and the Tobacco Plantations.
THE Tobacco Plantations take from England their Cloathing,
Household Goods, Iron Manufactures of all Sorts, Saddles, Bridles,
Brass and Copper Wares, and notwithstanding their dweUing among
the Woods, they take their very Turner's Wares, and almost every
Thing else that may be called the Manufacture of England: So that
indeed it is a very great Number of People that are employed to pro-
vide a sufficient Supply of Goods for them.
ENGLAND takes from them not only what Tobacco we consimie
at Home, but very great Quantities for Re-exportation, which may
properly be said to be the surest Way of enriching this Kingdom.
Chap. XVI.
TRADE between England and Carolina.
Carolina lies in as happy a Climate as any in the World, from
32 to 36 Degrees of Northern Latitude. The Soil is generally fertile:
The Rice it produces is said to be the best in the World, and no
Country affords better Silk than has been brought from thence,
though for Want of sufficient Encouragement the Quantity imported
is very small. . . . The Rice Trade, since it hath been made an
enumerated Commodity, is under great Discouragement; for it can-
^ The Trade and Navigation of Great Britain considered: shewing that the surest
way for a Nation to increase in Riches, is to prevent the Importation of such Foreign
Commodities as may he rais'd at Home. By Joshua Gee (London, 1729), 20-25.
70 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
not be sent directly to Portugal and Spain as formerly; and it will
not bear the Charge of bringing home and Re-shipping, unless it be
at a Time when the Crops in the Milanese and Egypt prove bad. . . .
Chap. XVII.
TRADE between England and Pensilvania.
Pensilvania within Forty Years has made wonderful In-
provements; they have built a large and regular City, they have
cleared great Tracts of Land, and raised very great Quantities of
Wheat and other Provisions, and they have by Way of Jamaica beat
out a very great Trade for their Corn and Provisions to the Spanish
Wcsl-Indies; and if this Trade be properly nurs'd up, it may draw
the Spanish Coast very much to depend on us for a Supply of Flower,
Bisket, &c. which may be of great Advantage to us.
It is already attended with that good Consequence, that it hath
supplied them with Gold and Silver, which is frequently brought
home by our trading Ships from thence, and has very much enlarged
their Demands upon us for Broad-cloth, Kersies, Druggets, Serges,
Stuffs, and Manufactures of all Sorts.
They supply the Sugar Plantations with Pipes and Barrel-
Staves, and other Lumber, with Flower, Bisket, Pork, &'c. But this
is not sufficient for their Cloathing, and therefore are forced to make
^thing by their own Labour and Industry to answer that End.
Chap. XVIII.
TR.\DE between England, New- Jersey and New- York.
THE Provinces of New- Jersey and New-York produce much the
same with Pensilvania, and their Traffic is much the same; we have
what Money they can raise to buy our Manufactures for their Cloath-
ing, and what they further want, they are forced to manufacture for
tbemielves as the aforesaid Colonies do.
Chap. XEX.
TRADE between England and New-England.
NEW-ENGLAND takes from us all Sorts of Woollen Manufac-
UiTft, Linnen, Haberdashery, ^r. To raise Money to pay for what they
take of us, they are forced to visit \\\t Spanish Coasts, where they pick
up any commodity they can trade for: They carry Lumber and Pro-
yWan to the Sugar Plantations, exchange Provision for Logwood
with the Logwood Cut tf- -• ( \mpeachey. They send Pipe and Barrel-
AGRICULTURE, INDUSTRY AND TRADE 71
Staves and Fish to Spain, Portugal, and the Streights. They send
Pitch, Tar and Turpentine to England, with some Skins: But all
those Commodities fall very short of purchasing their Cloathing in
England; and therefore what other Necessaries they want, they are
forced to manufacture for themselves, as the aforementioned
Colonies.
II. New England
A. Commerce of New England, 1^48 ^
Owing pardy to the sterility of the soil and partly to the colonial policy of the
mother country, by which the natural products of the country were denied access to
EngUsh ports, the energies of New England were diverted from the channels of
agriculture to those of commerce. Since this section of the American colonies lay
in the same climatic zone as England itself, and therefore produced much the same
things, the natural products of New England were for the most part placed among
the non-enumerated articles, which could not be sent to England. The residents
of New England were forced, consequently, either to find other markets for their
goods, or to engage in other industries. In the fisheries, shipbuilding, and the
carrying trade they found the most profitable occupations, and with the profits
from these were able to purchase large quantities of manufactured goods from
England. The following extract gives a brief account of New England commerce,
showing the important products.
The goods which are shipped to London from New England are
the following: all sorts of fish caught near Newfoundland and else-
where; train-oil of several sorts; whalebone, tar, pitch, masts, new
ships, of which a great number is annually built, a few hides, and
sometimes some sorts of wood. The English islands in America,
as Jamaica and Barbadoes, get from New England, fish, flesh, butter,
cheese, tallow, horses, cattle; all sorts of lumber, such as pails,
buckets, and hogsheads; and have returns made in rum, sugar,
molasses, and other produces of the country, or in cash, the greatest
part of all which they send to London (the money especially) in pay-
ment of the goods received from thence; and yet all this is insuffi-
cient to pay off the debt.
B. Carrying Trade of New England, iy6i ^
In this extract there is emphasized the part which the shipping of New England
played in the carrjdng trade. The profits of New England ship builders and owners
^ Travels into North America. By Peter Kalm (London, 1771). In Pinkerton,
Voyages and Travels (London, 181 2), XIII, 439.
2 European Settlements in America. By Edmund Burke (London, 1761), II,
i73~7> passim.
7; READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
from the sale of their vessels and also from their use as carriers. Burke
justifies this trade on the ground that the profits were ultimately spent for English
manufactures, which otherwise could not have been bought.
That we may be enabled to form some judgment of the wealth
of this city, [Boston] we must observe that from Christmas 1747, to
Christmas 1748, five hundred vessels cleared out from this port only,
for a foreign trade; and four hundred and thirty were entered inwards;
to say nothing of coasting and fishing vessels, both of which are
extremely numerous, and said to be equal in number to the others.
Indeed the trade of New-England is great, as it supplies a large quan-
tity of goods from within itself; but it is yet greater, as the people of
this country^ are in a manner the carriers for all the colonies of North
America and the West-Indies, and even for some parts of Europe.
They may be considered in this respect as the Dutch of America.
The commodities which the country yields are principally masts
and yards, for which they contract largely with the royal navy; pitch,
tar, and turpentine; staves, lumber, boards; all sorts of provisions,
beef, pork, butter and cheese in large quantities; horses and live cattle;
Indian com and pease; cyder, apples, hemp and fiax. Their peltry trade
is not very considerable. They have a very noble cod fishery upon their
coast, which employs a vast number of their people: they are enabled
by this to export annually above thirty-two thousand quintals of
choice cod fish, to Spain, Italy, and the Mediterranean, and about
nineteen thousand quintals of the refuse sort to the West-Indies, as
food for the negroes. The quantity of spirits, which they distil
in Boston from the molasses they bring in from all parts of the West-
Indies, is as surprising as the cheap rate at which they vend it, which
it under two shillings a gallon. With this they supply almost all
the consumption of our Colonies in North America, the Indian trade
there, the vast demands of their own and the Newfoundland fishery,
and in great measure those of the African trade; but they are more
famous for the quantity and cheapness, than for the excellency of
their rum. . . .
The btisiness of ship-building is one of the most considerable
which Boston or the other sea-port towns in New-England carry on.
Ships are sometimes built here ujx)n commission; but frequently,
the merchants of New England have them constructed upon their
awn account; and loading them with the produce of the colony,
naval stores, fish« and fish-oil principally, they send them out upon a
trailing voyage to Spain, Portugal, or the Mediterranean; where,
having disposed of thfir car^o, tht^v make what advantage they
AGRICULTURE, INDUSTRY AND TRADE 73
can by freight, until such time as they can sell the vessel herself to
advantage, which they seldom fail to do in a reasonable time. They
receive the value of the vessel, as well as of the freight of the goods,
which from time to time they carried, and of the cargo with which
they sailed originally, in bills of exchange upon London; for as the
people of New England have no commodity to return for the value
of above a hundred thousand pounds, which they take in various
sorts of goods from England, but some naval stores, and those in no
great quantities, they are obliged to keep the balance somewhat even
by this circuitous commerce, which, though not carried on with Great
Britain nor with British vessels, yet centers in its profits, where all the
money which the colonies can make in any manner must center at last.
I know that complaints have been made of this trade, principally
because the people of New-England, not satisfied with carrying out
their own produce, become carriers for the other colonies, particu-
larly for Virginia a^d Maryland, from whom they take tobacco,
which in contempt oithe act of navigation, they carry directly to
the foreign market. Whdre not having the duty and accumulated
charges to which the BritisH\merchant is liable to pay, they in a man-
ner wholly out him of the trade. Again, our sugar colonies complain
as loudly, that the vast trade which New England drives in lumber,
live stock, and provisions, with the French and Dutch sugar islands,
particularly with the former, enables these islands, together with the
internal advantages they possess, greatly to undersell the English
plantations. That, the returns which the people of New England
make from these islands being in sugar, or the productions of sugar,
syrups, and molasses, the rum which is thence distilled prevents the
sale of our West-India rum. That this trade proves doubly disad-
vantageous to our sugar islands; first, as it enables the French to
sell their sugars cheaper than they could otherwise afford to do; and
then as it finds them a market for their molasses, and other refuse
of sugars, for which otherwise they could find no market at all; be-
cause rum interferes with brandy, a considerable manufacture of
Old France.
C. Exports of New England, i'/6;^ ^
The extent to which the fisheries contributed to the wealth of New England,
and its importance in the foreign trade of that section are both shown by this extract.
I shall conclude this account, with a table of the exports of this
province since the peace [of 1763].
^ American Husbandry. By an American (London, 1775), I, 59-61.
7f READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
Cod'fish dried, 10,000 tons, at 10 1.. £icxd,ooo
Whale and cod-oil, 8500 tons, at 15 1 127,500
Whale-bone, 28 tons, at 300 1 8,400
Pickled nuickcrcl and shads, 15,000 barrels at 20s.. 15,000
Masts, boards, staves, shingles, &c 75»ooo
Ships about 70 sail, at 700 1 49,000
Turpentine, tar, and pitch, 1500 barrels, at 8s 600
Horses, and live stock, 37,ooo
Pot-ash, 14,000 barrels, at sos.. 35,ooo
Pickled beef and pork, 19,000 barrels, at 30s 28,500
Bees-wax, and sundries, 9>ooo
Total £485,000
Upon ihis table I must observe, that the fishery amounts to
250,900 1. of it; or rather more than half the total, which shews what
a great propwrtion of the people of this colony are employed in it.
The other half b the produce of their lands, for so both ships and
pot-ash must be esteemed; Cattle and beef, pork, &c. came to 65,500 1.
all the rest is timber or what is made of timber; this is a proportion
that gives us at once a tolerable idea of the colony. We are not
from hence to suppose, that the great body of the landed interests
in this coimtry has, like Canada, no other resource to purchase for-
ciffi commodities with, than this small export. The case is very
" ~ ' . New tlngland enjoys a vast fishery, and a great trade, which
1 no slight portion of wealth. The most considerable commer-
cial town in all America is in this province; and another circumstance
is the increase of population. These causes operate so as to keep
up a considerable circulation within the colony. Boston and the
shipping arc a market which enriches the country interest far more
than the above mentioned export, which, for so numerous a people,
is very inconsiderable. By means of this internal circulation, the
lanners and country gentlemen are enabled very amply to purchase
whatever they want from abroad.
ni. Middle Colonies
A. Foreign Trade of New York, 1748 ^
The ooramenx ol the middle colonies steadily increased, and in time both New
York and PhOaddpUa paated Boston as imi>ortant seaports. The middle colonics
caiffad on a trade aa eitensive as that of New England, but made up to a greater
«tCBt of africullural products, such as provisions of every sort. Peter Kalm, with
hit chancurittk thoroughneta, gives a dear picture of the foreign trade of New
Yorkjnthe niddle of the 18th century.
» TnmU imio Sorik America. By Peter Kalm (London, 1771). In Pinkerton,
VoyHM uA Tmvda (London, 181 a), XIII, 458-9.
AGRICULTURE, INDUSTRY AND TRADE 75
New York probably carries on a more extensive commerce than any
town in the Enghsh North American provinces; at least it may be
said to equal them; Boston and Philadelphia however come very
near up to it. The trade of New York extends to many places; and
it is said they send more ships from thence to London than they do
from Philadelphia. They export to that capital all the various sorts
of skins which they buy of the Indians, sugar, logwood, and other
dying woods, rum, mahogany, and many other goods which are the
produce of the West Indies; together with all the specie which they
get in the course of trade. Every year they build several ships here,
which are sent to London, and there sold; and of late years they
have shipped a quantity of iron to England. In return for these,
they import from London stuffs, and every other article of English
growth or manufacture, together with all sorts of foreign goods. Eng-
land, and especially London, profits immensely by its trade with the
American colonies; for not only New York, but likewise all the other
English towns on the continent, import so many articles from England,
that all their specie, together with the goods which they get in other
countries, must altogether go to Old England, in order to pay the
amount, to which they are however insufficient. From hence it ap-
pears how much a well-regulated colony contributes to the increase
and welfare of its mother country.
New York sends many ships to the West Indies, with flour, corn,
biscuit, timber, tuns, boards, flesh, fish, butter, and other provisions;
together with some of the few fruits that grow here. Many ships
go to Boston in New England, with corn and flour; and take in
exchange, flesh, butter, timber, different sorts of fish, and other
articles, which they carry further to the West Indies. They now
and then take rum from thence, which is distilled there in great
quantities, and sell it here with a considerable advantage. Some-
times they send yachts with goods from New York to Philadelphia,
and at other times yachts are sent from Philadelphia to New York,
which is only done, as appears from the gazettes, because certain
articles are cheaper at one place than at the other. They send
ships to Ireland every year, laden with all kinds of West India goods,
but especially with linseed, which is reaped in this province. I
have been assured that in some years no less than ten ships have been
sent to Ireland, laden with nothing but Unseed, because it is said the
flax in Ireland does not afford good seed ; but probably the true reason
is this; the people of Ireland, in order to have the better flax, make
use of the plant before the seed is ripe, and therefore are obliged to
j6 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
send for foreign seed; and hence it becomes one of the chief articles
in trade.
At this time a bushel of linseed is sold for eight shillings of New
York currency, or exactly a piece of eight.
The goods which are shipped to the West Indies are sometimes
paid for with ready money, and sometimes with West India goods,
which are either first brought to New York, or immediately sent to
England or Holland. If a ship does not chuse to take in West India
goods in its return to New York, or if nobody will freight it, it often
goes to Newcastle in England, to take in coals for ballast, which when
brought home sell for a pretty good price. In many parts of the town
coals are made use of, both for kitchen fires, and in rooms, because
they are reckoned cheaper than wood, which at present costs thirty
shillings of New York currency per fathom ; of which measure I have
before made mention. New York has likewise some intercourse with
South Carolina; to which it sends corn, flour, sugar, rum, and other
goods, and takes rice in return, which is almost the only commodity
exported from South Carolina.
The goods with which the province of New York trades are not
very numerous. They chiefly export the skins of animals which are
bought of the Indians about Oswego; great quantities of boards, com-
ing for the most part from Albany; timber and ready-made lumber,
from that part of the country which lies about the river Hudson ; and
lastly, wheat, flour, barley, oats, and other kinds of corn, which are
brought from New Jersey and the cultivated parts of this province.
I have seen yachts from New Brunswick, laden with wheat which lay
loose on board, and with flour packed up in tuns; and also with great
quantities of linseed. New York likewise exports some flesh and
other provisions out of its own province, but they are very few; nor is
the quantity of pease, which the people about Albany bring, much
greater. Iron however may be had more plentifully, as it is found in
several parts of this province, and is of a considerable goodness; but
all the other products of this country are of little account.
Moat of the wine, which is drank here and in the other colonies,
b brought from the isle of Madeira, and is very strong and fiery.
No manufactures of note have as yet been established here; at
present they get all manufactured goods, such as woollen and linen
cloth, &c. from England, and esjiecially from London.
The river Hudson is very convenient for the commerce of this
cily; as it is navigable for near an hundred and fifty English miles
up the country, and falls into the bay not far from the town, on its
AGRICULTURE, INDUSTRY AND TRADE 77
western side. During eight months of the year this river is full of
yachts, and other greater and lesser vessels, either going to New York
or returning from thence, laden either with inland or foreign goods.
I cannot make a just estimate of the ships that annually come to
this town or sail from it. But I have found, by the Pensylvania
gazettes, that from the first of December in 1729, to the fifth of De-
cember in the next year, two hundred and eleven ships entered the
port of New York, and two hundred and twenty- two cleared it; and
since that time there has been a great increase of trade here.
B. Exports of New York and Pennsylvania, i'j6;^-iy66 ^
An interesting and probably fairly reliable estimate of the actual value of the
exports from New York after the conclusion of the Seven Years' War is here given.
It should be noted that practically everything is the product of the extractive
industries, and four-fifths are derived from agriculture.
I shall next lay before the reader the exports of this province []New
York] as taken on an average of three years since the peace [of 1763].
Flour and biscuit 250,000 barrels, at 20s £250,000
Wheat 70,000 qrs 70,000
Beans, pease, oats, Indian corn and other grains,. . 40,000
Salt beef, pork, hams, bacon, and venison, 18,000
Bees wax, 30,000 lb. at is i,Soo
Tongues, butter, and cheese, 8,000
Flax seed, 7000 hhds. at 40s 14,000
Horses and live stock 1 7,000
Product of cultivated lands, 418,500
Timber planks, masts, boards, staves, and shingles 25,000
Pot ash, 7000 hhds 14,000
Ships built for sale, 20, at £700 14,000
Copper ore, and iron in bars and pigs 20,000
£526,000
Let me upon this table observe, that far the greater part of this
export is the produce of the lands including timber; and even the
metals may be reckoned in the same class; this shews us that agri-
culture in New York is of such importance as to support the most
considerable part of the province without the assistance of either
the fishery or of commerce; not that the city of New York has not
traded largely, perhaps equal to Boston, but the effects of that trade
have been chiefly the introduction of money by the means of barter,
besides the exportation of their own products: whereas New England's
exports consist five parts in six of fish, and the other products of
^ American Htisbandry. By an American (London, 1775), 1, 124-5, 18 1-2.
78 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
the fishery; a strong proof that agriculture is far more profitable in
one country, than in the other; for settlers in colonies will never take
to the sea, in a country whose agriculture yields well ; but in very bad
climates, and such as destroy instead of cherishing the products of the
earth, any branch of industry pays better than cultivating the earth. . . .
Before I conclude this chapter, I shall insert a table of the exports
of the province [Pennsylvania].
Biscuit flour, 350,0x3 barrels, at 20s £350,000
Wheat, 100,000 qrs. at 20s 100,000
Beans, pease, oats, Indian com, and other grain,. . 12,000
Salt beef, pork, hams, bacon, and venison, 45.000
Bees wax, 20,000 lb. at is 1,000
Tongues, butter, and cheese, 10,000
Deer, and sundry other sorts of skins, 50,000
Live stock and horses, 20,000
Flax seed, 15,000 hhds. at 40s 30,000
Timber plank, masts, boards, staves, and shingles 35, 000
Ships btdlt for sale, 25, at £700 17,500
Copper ore, and iron in pigs and bars, 35,000
Total £705,500
Upon this account I must observe, that far the greatest part is the
cultivated produce of the land; which is the very contrary to New
England, whose lands yield nothing to export. In proportion to this
circumstance, b the value of a colony, for it is the nature of coloniza-
tion, that the people ought, on first principles, to support them-
selves by agriculture alone. Wheat appears to be the grand export
of this proxince: that, and other articles of food, amount to above
half a million, which is a vast sum of money to export regularly,
besides feeding every rank of people in the utmost plenty; but of late
years this has risen to much more, for wheat, instead of being at 20s.
a quarter, is at above 30s. No circumstance in the world can be more
strong, in proof of the temperature, moderation and healthiness of the
climate, than this of exporting such quantities of wheat, which through-
out the globe, thrives nowhere in climates insalubrious to mankind: . . .
IV. Southern Colonies
A. Report on Virginia^ 1671 ^
A (oroeiul and characteristic report was made by Governor William Berkeley
In n«poo«c 10 a request from the British Lords Commissioners of Trade and
PkuiUiioM for information as to conditions in Virginia in 167 1. Berkeley was
wiqyaMed to ipeak, for he was governor of that province from 1641 to 1677.
• SltkOtt at Large: being a CoUection of AU ike Laws of Virginia. By W. W.
(New York. i8i Oil. ^, 4-7.
AGRICULTURE, INDUSTRY AND TRADE 79
12. What commodities are there of the production, growth and
manufacture of your plantation; and particularly, what materials
are there already growing, or may be produced for shipping in the
same?
Answer. Commodities of the growth of our country, we never
had any but tobacco, which in this yet is considerable, that it
yields his majesty a great revenue; but of late, we have begun to
make silk, and so many mulberry trees are planted, and planting,
that if we had skilfuU men from Naples or Sicily to teach us the art
of making it perfectly, in less than half an age, we should make as
much silk in an year as England did yearly expend three score years
since; but now we hear it is grown to a greater excess, and more com-
mon and vulgar usage. Now, for shipping, we have admirable masts
and very good oaks; but for iron ore I dare not say there is sufficient
to keep one iron mill going for seven years. . . .
18. What number of ships do trade yearly to and from your
plantation, and of what burthen are they?
Answer. English ships, near eighty come out of England and
Ireland every year for tobacco; few New England ketches; but of
our own, we never yet had more than two at one time, and those
not more than twenty tuns burthen.
19. What obstructions do you find to the improvement of the
trade and navigation of the plantations within your government?
Answer. Mighty and destructive, by that severe act of parlia-
ment which excludes us the having any commerce with any nation
in Europe but our own, so that we cannot add to our plantation any
commodity that grows out of it, as olive trees, cotton or vines.
Besides this, we cannot procure any skilfull men for one now hopeful!
commodity, silk; for it is not lawfuU for us to carry a pipe stave, or
a barrel of corn to any place in Europe out of the king's dominions.
If this were for his majesty's service or the good of his subjects,
we should not repine, whatever our sufferings are for it; but on my
soul, it is the contrary for both. And this is the cause why no small
or great vessells are built here; for we are most obedient to all laws,
whilst the New England men break through, and men trade to any
place that their interest lead them.
20. What advantages or improvements do you observe that may
be gained to your trade and navigation?
Answer. None, unless we had liberty to transport our pipe staves,
timber and corn to other places besides the king's dominions. . . .
23. What course is taken about the instructing the people, within
8o READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
your government in the christian religion; and what provision is
there made for the paying of your ministry?
Answer. The same course that is taken in England out of towns;
every man according to his ability instructing his children. We have
fbrty eight parishes, and our mmisters are well paid, and by my
consent should be better ij they would pray oftener and preach less. But
of all other commodities, so of this, the worst are sent us, and we had
few that we could boast of, since the persicution in Cromwell's tiranny
drove divers worthy men hither. But, I thank God, there are no free
Mckools nor printing, and I hope we shall not have these hundred years;
for Uatming has brought disobedience, and heresy, and sects into the
world, and printing has divulged them, and libels against the best
government. God keep us from both!
B. Exports of the Southern Colonies, iy6^ ^
Tlie author of American Husbandry was a thorough-going Mercantilist who
approved of the southern colonies because they exported to England " true staples"
and did not compete with her, while he equally disapproved of the commerce of
the New England colonies. The proportion which tobacco and rice form of the
total exports should be noted in these tables.
To shew the vast importance of these colonies [Virginia and
Maryland] to Great Britain, it will be necessary to lay before the reader
the last accounts of their exports [1763?], from which we shall also
see what proportion their common husbandry bears to their tobacco.
Tobacco, 96,000 hogsheads, at 8 1 £768,000
Indian com, beans, pease, &c 30,000
Wheat, 40,000 quarters, at 20s 40,000
Deer and other skins 25,000
Iron in bars and pigs. 35,000
Saasalras, snake-root, ginseng, &c 7,000
Masts, |dank, staves, turpentine, and tar 55,000
Flax-seed, 7000 hogsheads, at 40 s 14,000 |
Pickled pork, beef, hams, and bacon 15,000 j
Ships buflt for sale, 30 at 1000 1 30,000
Hemp 1000 tons at 31 1. (besides 4000 tons more
and aooo of flax worked up for their own use) . . . 21 ,000
Total 1 ,040,000
Upon this table I must observe once more, how extremely imi
Unt these colonies are to the mother country. To raise above
million sterling, the greatest part of which are true staples, and Hi
» Amur^am TltuhnmArv jKv -n Am,.rir- '' '^ndon, 1775), I, 256-7; 11,3-!-^.
AGRICULTURE, INDUSTRY AND TRADE 8i
rest necessary for the West Indies, with no fish, whale bone, oil, &c.
commodities which some of the colonies have run away with from
Britain, by rivalling her in her fishery — possessing no manufactures,
even to such a degree that all attempts to bring the people into towns
have proved vain. By manufactures, I mean those for sale; for as
to private families working wool, hemp, and flax for their own use,
it is what many do all over America, and are necessitated to do, for
want of money and commodities to buy them. A colony so truly
important, I say, deserves every attention from the mother country,
and every encouragement to induce settlers to fix in it. . . .
The following is a state of the exports of Georgia, upon an average of
three years since the peace \_of 176^.
£
18000 barrels of rice, at 40s 36,000
Indigo, 1 7000 lb. at 2S i)7oo
Silk, 2500 lb. at 20s 2,500
Deer and other skins 1 7,000
Boards, staves, &c 11 ,000
Tortoise-shell, drugs, cattle, &c 6,000
£ 74,200
^
CHAPTER m
LABOR, EXCHAXGE, AND POPULATION, 1 607-1 763
LABOR
I. Scarcity of Labor
A. High Wages in Pennsylvania, i6g8 ^
Owing to the large extent of practically free land in the colonies and the ease
with which an industrious man could establish himself as an independent farmer,
very few penons were content to remain as hired laborers. Hence labor — that
is hired l^x>r — was scarce throughout the whole of the colonial period, and wages
were hi^ Wages were high both because labor was scarce, and also because it
was very productive and the employer could afford to pay high wages. The writer
was for seventeen years a resident of a Quaker settlement.
Labouring-Men have commonly here [Pennsylvania], between
14 and 1$ Pounds a Year, and their Meat, Drink, Washing and Lodg-
ing; and by the Day their Wages is generally between Eighteen
Pence and Half a Crown, and Diet also; But in Harvest they have
usually between Three and Four Shillings each Day, and Diet. The
Maid Servants Wages is commonly betwixt Six and Ten Pounds
per Annum, with very good Accommodation. And for the Women
who gel their Livelihood by their own Industry, their Labour is very
dear, for I can buy in London a Cheese-Cake for Two Pence, bigger
than theirs at that price when at the same time their Milk is as cheap
as we can buy it in London, and their Flour cheaper by one half.
Corn and Flesh, and what else serves Man for Drink, Food and
Rayment, is much cheaper here than in England, or elsewhere; but
the chief reason why Wages of Servants of all sorts is much higher
here than there, arises from the great Fertility and Produce of the
Place; besides if these large Stipends were refused them, they would
qukkly set up for themselves, for they can have Provision very cheap,
» An aUtartcal and Geographical Account of the Province and Country of Peiisil-
(Loodoo, 1698). By Gabriel Thomas. In Original Narratives of Early
HiMory. Ediud by J. F. Jameson (New York, 1910), XIII, 328-9.
by perminioD of the editor and the publishers, Charles Scribner's Sons.
LABOR, EXCHANGE AND POPULATION 83
and Land for a very small matter, or next to nothing in comparison
of the Purchace of Lands in England; and the Farmers there, can
better afford to give that great Wages than the Farmers in England
can, for several Reasons very obvious.
As First, their Land costs them (as I said but just now) little or
nothing in comparison, of which the Farmers commonly will get
twice the encrease of Corn for every Bushel they sow, that the
Farmers in England can from the richest Land they have.
In the Second place, they have constantly good price for their
Corn by reason of the great and quick vent into Barbadoes and other
Islands; through which means Silver is become more plentiful than
here in England, considering the Number of People, and that causes
a quick Trade for both Corn and Cattle; and that is the reason
that Corn differs now from the Price formerly, else it would be at
half the Price it was at then; for a Brother of mine (to my own par-
ticular knowledge) sold within the compas of one Week about One
Hundred and Twenty fat Beasts, most of them good handsom large
Oxen.
Thirdly, They pay no Tithes, and their Taxes are inconsiderable;
the Place is free for all Persuasions, in a Sober and Civil way; for
the Church of England and the Quakers bear equal Share in the
Government. They live Friendly and Well together; there is no
Persecution for Religion, nor ever like to be; 'tis this that knocks
all Commerce on the Head, together with high Imposts, strict Laws,
and cramping Orders. Before I end this Paragraph, I shall add
another Reason why Womens Wages are so exhorbitant; they 'are
not yet very numerous, which makes them stand upon high Terms
for their several Services, in Sempstering, Washing, Spinning, Knit-
ting, Sewing, and in all the other parts of their Imployments; for they
have for Spinning either Worsted or Linen, Two Shillings a Pound,
and commonly for Knitting a very Course pair of Yarn Stockings,
they have half a Crown a pair; moreover they are usually Marry 'd
before they are Twenty Years of Age, and when once in that Noose,
are for the most part a little uneasie, and make their Husbands so
too, till they procure them a Maid Servant to bear the burden of the
Work, as also in some measured to wait on them too.
B. High Wages in New England, 1775 ^
After one hundred and fifty years of colonization the same complaint of scarcity
of labor and high wages was still heard as at the beginning. High wages have
^ American Husbandry. By an American (London, 1775), I, 73.
84 ECONOMIC READINGS IN HISTORY
alwtys been characteristic of the United States for the reason that the laborer has —
at least until the last generation — had an economic alternative: he had the choice
of working (or wages or of farming practically free land on his own account. Hence
wages had to be at least as high as the return an independent farmer could gain for
bom his land, which on the new lands of the colonial p>eriod was considerable.
I have more than once mentioned the high price of labour: this
article depends on the circumstance I have now named; where
families are so far from being burdensome, men marry very young,
and where land is in such plenty, men very soon become farmers,
however low they set out in life. Where this is the case, it must at
once be evident that the price of labour must be very dear; nothing
but a high price will induce men to labour at all, and at the same
time it presently puts a conclusion to it by so soon enabling them to
take a piece of waste land. By day labourers,' which are not common
in the colonies, one shilling will do as much in England as half a
crown in New England. This makes it necessary to depend prin-
dpally on [indented] servants, and on labourers who article them-
selves to serve three, five, or seven years, which is always the case
with newcomers who are in f>overty.
II. Indented Servants
A. Servants and Slaves in America, 1748 ^
At least two factors which an employer of labor must count upon are sufficiency
and permanency. But there were not enough free hired laborers in the colonies to
do the work, nor could an employer count upon retaining these laborers for any
defimte length of time. Hence some form of compulsory labor was eagerly resorted
to, and both indented servants and slaves were made use of. The terms of tlu
Comer ran for a short period and the control of the master was not so absolute, but
the purchase of a slave involved the outlay of a considerable sum of money. Free
laborers were more common m New England, indented servants in the middle
colonies and Maryland, and slaves in the South. Kalm gives a careful accoimt of
thtte three dasses of labor.
The servants which are made use of in the English American
colonies are cither free persons, or slaves, and the former are again
of two diflcrent sorts.
First, Those who are quite free serve by the year; they are not
only allowed to leave their service at the expiration of their year,
but may leave it at any time when they do not agree with their
matters. However, in that case they are in danger of losing their
* Tra9dt imt4> North America. By Peter Kabn (London, 1770). In Knkerton,
VoyHM Md TUvds. XIII, 4W-Soa.
LABOR, EXCHANGE AND POPULATION 85
wages, which are very considerable. A man-servant who has some
abilities, gets between sixteen and twenty pounds in Pennsylvania
currency, but those in the country do not get so much. A servant-
maid gets eight or ten pounds a year: these servants have their food
besides their wages, but must buy their own clothes, and what they
get of these, they must thank their master's goodness for.
Second, The second kind of free servants consist of such persons
as annually come from Germany, England, and other countries, in
order to settle here. These new comers are very numerous every
year: there are old and young ones, and of both sexes; some of
them have fled from oppression, under which they supposed themselves
to have laboured. Others have been driven from their country by
persecution on account of religion; but most of them are poor, and
have not money enough to pay their passage, which is between six
and eight pounds sterling for each person; therefore they agree
with the captain that they will suffer themselves to be sold for a few
years, on their arrival. In that case the person who buys them,
pays the freight for them; but frequently very old people come over,
who cannot pay their passage, they therefore sell their children,
so that they serve both for themselves and for their parents: there
are likewise some who pay part of their passage, and they are sold
only for a short time. From these circumstances, it appears, that
the price of the poor foreigners who come over to North America
is not equal, and that some of them serve longer than others: when
their time is expired, they get a new suit of clothes from their master,
and some other things: he is likewise obliged to feed and clothe them
during the years of their servitude. Many of the Germans who
come hither, bring money enough with them to pay their passage,
but rather suffer themselves to be sold, with a view, that during
their servitude they may get some knowledge of the language and
quality of the country, and the like, that they may the better be able
to consider what they shall do when they have got their liberty.
Such servants are taken preferable to all others, because they are
not so dear; for to buy a negroe or black slave requires too much
money at once; and men or maids who get yearly wages, are likewise
too dear; but this kind of servants may be got for half the money,
and even for less; for they commonly pay fourteen pounds, Pen-
sylvania currency, for a person who is to serve four years, and so
on in proportion. Their wages therefore are not above three
pounds Pensylvania currency, per annum. This kind of servants,
the English call servings. When a person has bought such a servant
86 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
for a certain number of years, and has an intention to sell him again,
he is at liberty to do so; but he is obliged, at the expiration of the
term of servitude, to provide the usual suit of cloaths for the servant,
unless he has made that part of the bargain with the purchaser. The
English and Irish commonly sell themselves for four years, but the
Germans frequently agree with the captain before they set out, to
pay him a certain sum of money, for a certain number of persons; as
soon as they arrive in America, they go about and try to get a man
who will pay the passage for them : in return they give according to
the circumstances, one or several of their children, to serve a certain
number of years: at last they make theiivbargain with the highest
bidder.
Third, The negroes or blacks make the third kind. They are
in a manner slaves; for when a negro is once bought, he is the pur-
chaser's ^rvant as long as he lives, unless he gives him to another,
or makes him free. However, it is not in the power of the master to
kill his negro for a fault, but he must leave it to the magistrates to
proceed according to the laws. Formerly the negroes were brought
over from Africa, and bought by almost every one who could afford
it. The quakers alone scrupled to have slaves; but they are no longer
50 nice, and they have as many negroes as other people. However,
many people cannot conquer the idea of its being contrary to the
laws of Christianity to keep slaves. There are likewise several
free negroes in town, who have been lucky enough to get a very
xealous quaker for their master, who gave them their liberty, after
they had faithfully served him for some time. . . .
At present they seldom bring over any negroes to the English
colonies, for those which were formerly brought thither, have multi-
plied considerably. . . .
The negroes were formerly brought from Africa, as I mentioned
before; but now this seldom happens, for they are bought in the
West Indies, or American Islands, whither they were originally
brought from their own country: for it has been found that on trans-
porting the negroes from Africa, immediately into these northern
countries, they have not such a good state of health, as when they
gradually change places, and are first carried from Africa to the
West Indies, and from thence to North America. It has frequently
been found, that the negroes cannot stand the cold here so well as the
Europeans or whites; for whilst the latter are not in the least affected
by the cold, the toes and fingers of the former are frequently frozen.
There Is likewise a matt-rial difTrn.nrr amon^' thorn in this ]>oint;
LABOR, EXCHANGE AND POPULATION 87
for those who come immediately from Africa, cannot bear the cold
so well as those who are either born in this country, or have been here
for a considerable time; for the frost easily hurts the hands and feet
of the negroes which come from Africa, or occasions violent pains
in their whole body, or in some parts of it, though it does not at all
affect those who have been here for some time. . . .
The price of negroes differs according to their age, health, and
abilities. A full-grown negro costs from forty pounds and upwards
to a hundred, of Pensylvania currency. A negro boy or girl of two or
three years old, can hardly he got for less than eight or fourteen pounds
in Pensylvania currency. Not only the quakers, but likewise several
christians of other denominations, sometimes set their negroes at
liberty.
B. Work of a Servant in Virginia, 1656 ^
The work of an indented servant was carefully regulated by the terms of the
contract or indenture that was entered into between the servant and the master who
paid his passage money. The following advice to intending emigrants who expected
to use this method of reaching America shows the usual terms of such a contract.
Let such as are so minded not rashly throw themselves upon the
voyage, but observe the nature, and enquire the qualities of the
persons with whom they ingage to transport themselves, or if (as
not acquainted with such as inhabit there, but go with Merchants
and Mariners, who transport them to others,) let their covenant
be such, that after their arrival they have a fort-nights time assigned
them to enquire of their Master, and make choyce of such as they
intend to expire their time with, nor let that brand of selling of serv-
ants, be any discouragement to deter any from going, for if a time
must be served, it is all one with whom it be served, provided they be
people of honest repute, with which the Country is well replenished.
And be sure to have your contract in writing and under hand and
seal, for if ye go over upon promise made to do this or that, or to be
free or your own men, it signifies nothing, for by a law of the Country
(waiving all promises) any one coming in and not paying their own
passages, must serve if men or women four years, if younger according
to their years, but where an Indenture is, that is binding and
observing.
The usual allowance for servants is (besides their charge of passage
^ Leah and Rachel: or, the Two Fruitfull Sisters Virginia and Mary-land. By
John Hammond (London, 1656). In Force, Tracts and Other Papers (Washing-
ton, 1844), III, no. xiv, II, 14.
88, READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
defrayed) at their expiration, a years provision of corne, dubble appar-
rell, tooles necessary, and land according to the custome of the
Countiy, which is an old delusion, for there is no land accustomary
due to the servant, but to. the Master, and therefore that servant
is unwise that will not dash out that custom in his covenant, and make
that due of land absolutely his own, which although at the present,
not of so great consequence; yet in a few years will be of much worth,
as I shall hereafter make manifest. . . .
Those Servants that will be industrious may in their time of
service gain a competent estate before JLheir Freedomes, which is
usually done by many, and they gaine esteeme and assistance that
appear so industrious: There is no Master almost but will allow
his Servant a parcell of clear ground to plant some Tobacco in for
himself, which he may husband at those many idle times he hath
allowed him and not prejudice, but rejoyce his Master to see it, which
in time of Shipping he may lay out for commodities, and in Summer
sell them again with advantage, and get a Sow-pig or two, which
any body almost will give him, and his Master suffer him to keep
them with his own, which will be no charge to his Master, and with
one years increase of them may purchase a Cow Calf or two, and !)>
that time he is for himself; he may have Cattle, Hogs and Tobacco
of his own, and come to live gallantly; but this must be gained (as
I said) by Industry and affability, not by sloth nor churlish behaviour.
C. Servants in Pennsylvania, lyy^ ^
The largest number of indented servants in any of the colonies was to be found
in PeansylviniA, where slavery was opix)sed by the Quakers. While the term o{
MTvke leems long as comimred with the cost to the master, it was probably in man\
CMC* the only system by which the settlers could reach America.
Pensylvania is not without negroe slaves for cultivation, though
the number bears no proportion to the white servants; it may also
be proper to remark, that there are in this province, and it is the
same in others, a difference in the white servants; they have, through-
out the province, the same sort of servants that perform work in
England, that is, hired by the year, in which case, they are washed,
lodged, and boarded, but find their own cloaths; an able bodied man
in husbandry, will get from lol. to i6l. a year sterling. Maids will
get so high as $1. to 7I. Another sort of white servants, which are un-
known in Britain, are the new settlers that are poor. Very many of
• Amtrkan Busbandry. By an American (London, 1775), I, 169-70. «
LABOR, EXCHANGE AND POPULATION 89
these cannot even pay their passage from Europe, which amounts
to lol. sterling, and agree therefore with the captain of the ship, that
he shall sell them for a certain number of years to be servants, in
which case the farmers buy them, that is, pay their freight, &c. and
this usually puts something also in the captain's pocket, beyond what
he would otherwise have. If the passenger has some money, but
not enough, he is then sold for a shorter time to make up the sum.
There are laws in the province to regulate this kind of servitude, which
seems very strange to us; the master is bound to feed, clothe, and use
the servant as well as others. Others that have money enough to
pay for their passage, especially Germans, yet will not pay, but choose
to be sold in order to have time to gain a knowledge of the language
and the manner of living in the country. Both these sorts of serv-
ants are greatly preferred to the common hiring methods; for the
wages do not amount to much more than half the other, and at the
same time there is a security of keeping them, which with common
servants is not the case; nor are these near so industrious. These
distinctions in servitude are met with in our other colonies, but they
do not occur so often, because for one new comer in them, thej[^
are twenty at Philadelphia.
III. Slave Labor
A. The Slave Trade to Virginia, lyoS ^
Slaves were first introduced into America in very large numbers from the West
Indies, where they were "seasoned" before being brought to the colder climate of
the more northerly regions. After the monopoly of the Royal African Company
was broken the larger part of the trade passed into the hands of other traders, among
whom were not a few New Englanders. Colonel Jenings was President of the
Council of Virginia.
Virginia November y® 27*^ 1708
May it please yd" Lordsps,
It was the 11*^ of last moneth and the Fleet then sailed, before I
had the honor to receive yo"" Lordships of the 15*^ of April concerning
the Negro Trade Since which I have endeavoured by the means of
the proper officers, and the informations of the ancient Inhabitants,
to answer Yo^ Lordps Commands, and in Order thereto have herewith
sent yo"^ Lordships an account of all the Negros imported into this
Colony from the 24*^ of June 1699 to the 12*^ of October last past
^ Letter from E. Jenings to the Lords of Trade. In Colonial Records of North
Carolina, I, 693-4.
9© READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
distinguishing those imported by the Royal African Company (679),
and those by separate Traders (5928), wherein yo^ Lordships will
perceive the latter have had much the greater Share. As to the par-
ticular Rates at which those Negros have been sold, they have been
variable according to the different times of their coming in and the
quality & ages of the Slaves, but the medium for men & women may
be reckoned from 20 to 30 pounds a head for those sold by the Com-
pany & from 20 to 35£ a head for the like kinds sold by the separate
Traders, who in gen* have sold theirs at a higher rate than the
Company.
How the Country was supplyed with Negros before the Trade
to Africa was laid open in the year 1698. I have endeavoured to
Inform my Self from some ancient Inhabitants conversant in that
Trade as well as by recollecting what hath happened in my own
knowledge, & find that before the year 1680 what negros were brought
to Virginia were imported generally from Barbados for it was very
rare to have a Negro ship come to this Country directly from Africa
since that time, and before the year 1698. the Trade of Negros became
more frequent, tho not in any proportion to what it hath been of late,
during which the AiTrican Company sent several Ships and others
by their Licence (as I have been informed) having bought their Slaves
of the Company brought them in hither for Sale, Among which I re-
member the late Alderman Jeffrys & S"" Jeffry Jeffrys were princi-
pally concerned, but all this time the price of the Negroes was currant
from £18 to 25 per head for men and women & never exceeded that
Rate. Whether the opening the Trade to Africa having created an
! ;lation between the Company and the Seperate Traders which
.:..,ald outbid the other in the purchase of their Slaves there, or
whether the dexterity of their Factors there in taking advantage
of the prevailing humour of our Inhabitants for some years past of
buying Negros even beyond their abilities, or the Concurrence of
both, hath raised the Rates of Negros so extravagantly, I shall not
pretend to determine but this I may venture to say that it will be much
harder to lower the price again now tis raised unless there be the
■tme Freedom of Trade continued as formerly for tho the Inhabitants
of this Country in gen" will not be so fond of purchasing Negros as
of late being sensibly convinced of their Error which has in a manner
rabed the Credit of the Country yet there will still be some that
muit, ft others that will at any rate Venture to buy them, & if the
Conyny tlooc have the management of the Trade, they'l find prc-
tcooet enough to keep up the price if not to impose what higher
LABOR, EXCHANGE AND POPULATION 91
rate they please, which the buyer must submit to, knowing he cannot
be supplyed by any other hand. As for vessells trading directly from
this place to the Coast of Africa I never knew of any nor is the same
practicable this Country not being provided with Commoditys suit-
able for carrying on such a Trade. This is the best account I am able
to give in Answer to yo'" Lordships Commands, wherein if I have
failed or mistaken in any point I beg yo'' Lordships favourable Con-
struction thereof Since I can with truth assure your Lordships that no
man hath a greater desire to serve yo'" Lordships than
My Lords
Your Lordships
most obedient servant
E. Jenings
B. Request of a Missionary for Slaves, iyi6 ^
Perhaps no more striking illustration could be given of the toleration with which
slavery was regarded in the southern colonies, and of the great scarcity of hired
labor, than this request of a minister of the gospel for three or four slaves. John
Urmstone labored for many years as a missionary in the straggling settlements of the
Carolinas and was described by a neighbor as a devout man.
North Carolina, Dec' 15*^, 17 16
Sir.
.... I pray you therefore desire the Treasurer to the Society
to pay to Joseph Jekyll Esq'" His Majesty's Collector of Customs
at Boston in New England, or his order 20 pounds sterling (bills of
equal date being produced) and if his correspondent the Bearer hereof
will undertake it pay likewise 40 pounds of like money to be invested
in goods to buy me 3 or 4 Negroes in Guinea; but if he refuse I beg
some body may be employed to engage some Guinea Capt° or Mer-
chant to be delivered to the aforesaid Jo° . . . Jekyll or to me 3
Negroes men of middle stature about 20 years old and a Girl of about
16 years, here is no living without servants there are none to be hired
of any colour and none of the black kind to be sold good for anything
under 50 or 6o£ white servants are seldom worth keeping and never
stay out the time indented for. I likewise desire a Bill of Exchange
for £20 sterling payable to me or order at Barbadoes. I believe I
have more due for according to my account: on the 25^^ Instant
there will be an hundred pounds coming to me. I shall be glad to
^ The Colonial Records of North Carolina. Edited by W. L. Saunders (Raleigh,
1886), II, 260-1.
92 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
hear my requesU are complied with and till then must struggle with
a hard Winter, scarcity of Provisions, and rub through many more
difficulties with all the patience I am endued with and ever be, Sir,
Your most humble Serv*
Jo° Urmstone
Missionary
C. Objeciums to the Prohibition of Rum and Slaves in Georgia, 1738 ^
Geocpa was founded in 1 733 under the leadership of General J. E. Oglethorpe
•s an asylum for "all the useless Poor in England, and distressed Protestants in
Europe." A charter was granted containing various restrictions and conditions and
the oootrol of the colony was placed in the hands of a board of trustees. Among
the ftyt*^ governing the colony were two which prohibited the importation of rum
•nd 6L slaves. These soon became a bone of contention between the colonists and
the trustees. A petition was drawn up by the settlers and sent to the trustees in
I, asking that these restrictions be removed.
The First of February, 1732-3, Mr. Oglethorpe arrived at Georgia
with the first Embarkation, consisting of Forty Families, making up-
wards of One Hundred Persons, all brought over and supported at
the Publick Charge. The First Thing he did after he arrived in
Georgia^ was to make a kind of solemn Treaty with a Parcel of fugitive
Indians, . . . and all of them have been ever since maintained at
the Publick Charge, at vast Expence, when many poor Christians
were starving in the Colony for Want of Bread; . . .
SECONDLY, He prohibited the Importation of Rum, under Pre-
tence, that it was destructive to the Constitution, and an Incentive
to Debauchery and Idleness: However specious these Pretences
might seem, a little Exp>erience soon convinced us, that this Restric-
tion was directly opposite to the Well-being of the Colony: . . .
THE THIRD Thing he did, was regularly to set out to each Free-
holder in Savannah, Lots of Fifty Acres, in three distinct Divisions,
wU. The Eighth Part of One Acre for a House and Garden in the Town:
Four Acres and seven-eighths, at a small Distance from Town; and
Poriy five Acres at a considerable Remove from thence. No regard
WM had to the Quality of the Ground in the Divisions, so that some
were altogether Pine Barren, and some Swamp and Morass, far
•mpming the Strength and Ability of the Planter: . . . But these
• A True amd llistarical Narrative of the Colony of Georgia, in America. lU-
PW. TWUer H ai. (Charlet Town, 1741). In Force, Tracts and Other PaiKrs
(WiihiaftoD. 183s) T 03.
LABOR, EXCHANGE AND POPULATION 93
and many other Hardships were scarcely felt by the few People that
came there, so long as Mr. Oglethorpe staid, which was about Fifteen
Months: They work'd hard indeed, in Building some Houses in
Town; but then they labour'd in common, and were likewise assisted
by Negroes from Carolina, who did the heaviest Work: But at ^ Mr.
Oglethorpe's going to England, the growing fame of the Colony was
thereby greatly increased, so that as it has been before observ'd,
People, in Abundance, from all Parts of the World, flock'd to Georgia.
Then they began to consider and endeavour, every one according to
his Genius or Abihties, how they might best subsist themselves.
Some, with great Labour and Expence, essayed the Making of Tar:^
This, as 'tis well known to the Trustees, never quitted Costs: Others
tried to make planck and saw Boards; which, by the great Price they
were obliged to sell them at, by Reason of the great Expence of
white Servants, was the chief Means of ruining those who thought
to procure a Living by their Buildings in Town; for Boards of all
kinds, could always be bought in Carolina, for half the Price that they
were able to sell them at; but few were capable to Commission them
from thence, and those who were so, were prevented from doing it,
upon Pretence of discouraging the Labour of white People in Georgia.
Those who had Numbers of Servants and Tracts of Land in the County,
went upon the Planting of Corn, Pease, Potatoes, dfc. and the Charge
of these who succeeded the best, so far exceeded the Value of the
Produce, that it would have saved three fourths to have bought all
from the Carolina Market. The Falling of Timber was a Task very un-
equal to the Strength and Constitution of white Servants; and the
Hoeing the Ground, they being exposed to the sultry Heat of the Sun,
insupportable ; and it is well known, that this Labour is one of the hard-
est upon the Negroes, even tho' their Constitutions are much stronger
than white People, and the Heat no Way disagreeable nor hurtful
to them; but in us it created infiamatory Fevers of various kinds,
both continued and intermittent; wasting and tormenting Fluxes, most
excruciating Cholicks, and Dry-Belly- A chs; Tremors, Vertigoes, Palsies,
and a long Train of painful and lingring nervous Distempers; which
brought on to many a Cessation both from Work and Life; especially
^ Before he departed, a Vessel with about twenty Families of Jews arrived
all of whom had Lots assigned them; and likewise a Vessel with forty trans-
ported Irish Convicts, whom he purchased, altho' they had been before refused
at Jamaica, and who afterwards occasioned continual Disturbances in the
Colony.
2 Mr. Causton, the Trustees Store keeper, mostly at their Charge, made a
Tarr Kiln, which turned out to no Advantage.
94 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
as Water without any Qualification was the chief Drink, and Salt
Meat the only Provisions that could be had or afforded ; And so gen-
eral were these Disorders, that during the hot Season, which lasts
from March to October^ hardly one Half of the Servants and working
People, were ever able to do their Masters or themselves the least
Service; and the Yearly Sickness of each Servant, generally speaking,
cost his Master as much as would have maintained a Negro for four
Years. These Things were represented to the Trustees in the Summer
of 1735, in a Petition for the Use of Negroes, signed by about Seven-
teen of the better Sort of People in Savannah; In this Petition there
was also set forth the great Disproportion betwixt the Maintenance
and Cloathing of white Servants and Negroes. This Petition was car-
ried to England and presented to the Trustees, by Mr. Hugh Stirling,
an experienced Planter in the Colony; but no Regard was had to it,
or to what he could say, and great Resentment was even shewn to
Mr. Thompsony the Master of the Vessel in which it went.
D. Answer of the Trustees, ly^Q ^
The trustees refused to accede to the petition of some of the landholders of
Georgia to permit the introduction of rum and slaves and to alter the tenure of the
Unds. Some years later, however, the influence of the Carolinas proved irresistible
and both these restrictions were broken down.
To the Magistrates of the Town of Savannah, in the Province of Georgia.
The Trustees for establishing the Colony of Georgia in Americaj
have received by the Hands of Mr. Benjamin Ball of London, Merchant,
an attested Copy of a Representation, signed by You the Magis-
trates, and many of the Inhabitants of Savannah, on the gth of Decem-
ber last, for altering the Tenure of the Lands, and introducing Negroes
into the Province, transmitted from thence by Mr. Robert Williams.
The Trustees are not surprized to find unwary People drawn
in by crafty Men, to join in a Design of extorting by Clamour from
the Trustees an Alteration in the Fundamental Laws, framed for the
Preservation of the People, from those very Designs.
And the Trustees are the more confirmed in their opinion ot the
Unreasonableness of this Demand, that they have received Petitions
from the Darien, and other Parts of the Province, representing the
Inconvenience and Danger, which must arise to the good People of
» A True and Hifloritat Narrative of the Colony of Georgia, in A merica. By Pat.
TWIfaf et at. (Charlct Town, 1741). In Force, Tracts and Other Papers (Wash-
Inffloii. i«j5), I, no. Iv, 51-3.
LABOR, EXCHANGE AND POPULATION 95
the Province from the Introduction of Negroes. And as the Trus-
tees themselves are fully convinced, that besides the Hazard attend-
ing that Introduction, it would destroy all Industry among the white ^'
Inhabitants; and that by giving them a Power to alien their Lands, the
Colony would soon be too like its Neighbours, void of white Inhab- t.
itants, filled with Blacks, and reduced to be the precarious Property ^
of a Few, equally exposed to Domestick Treachery, and Foreign In-
vasion; and therefore the Trustees cannot be supposed to be in any
Disposition of granting this Request; and if they have not before
this signified their Dislike of it, this Delay is to be imputed to no ■
other Motives, but the Hopes they had conceived, that Time and
Experience would bring the Complainants to a better Mind: And
the Trustees readily join Issue with them in their Appeal to Pos-
terity, who shall judge between them, who were their best Friends;
Those, who endeavoured to preserve for them a Property in their
Lands, by tying up the Hands of their unthrifty Progenitors; or
They, who wanted a Power to mortgage or alien them: Who were
the best Friends to the Colony, Those who with great Labour and
Cost had endeavoured to form a Colony of His Majesty's Subjects,
and persecuted Protestants from other Parts of Europe, had placed
them on a fruitful Soil, and strove to secure them in their Possessions,
by those Arts which naturally tend to keep the Colony full of useful
and industrious People, capable both to cultivate and defend it; or
Those, who, to gratify the greedy and ambitious Views of a few
Negroe Merchants, would put it into their Power to become sole
Owners of the Province, by introducing their baneful Commodity;
which, it is well known by sad Experience, has brought our Neighbour
Colonies to the Brink of Ruin, by driving out their white Inhab- ,,.
itants, who were their Glory and Strength, to make room for Black,
who are now become the Terror of their unadvised Masters.
Signed by Order of the Trustees,
this 20th Day of June, 1739.
Benj. Martyn, Secretary.
E. Unprofitableness of Slavery, i'j'J4 ^
By 1774 the tobacco lands of Virginia had been pretty well exhausted as a result
of wasteful methods of cultivation, and the combination of slavery and worn-out
lands was clearly unprofitable. This conclusion was reached by the tutor in the
family of a rich Virginia planter.
^ Journal and Letters, 1767-1774. By Philip V. Fithian. Edited by J. R.
Williams (Princeton, 1900). Also in American Historical Review, V, 304, 307.
96 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
Mr. Carter now possesses 60000 Acres of Land; and about 600
Negroes. But his Estate is much divided, and lies in almost every
county in this Colony; He has Lands in the Neighbourhood of Wil-
liamsburg, and an elegant and Spacious House in that City. He
owns a great part of the well-known Iron- Works near Baltimore in
Maryland. And he has one or more considerable Farms not far
from Anapolis. . . .
Monday y A pril 4. After Supper I had a long conversation with Mrs.
Carter concerning Negroes in Virginia, and find that She esteems
their value at no higher rate than I do. We both concluded, (I am
pretty certain that the conclusion is just) that if in Mr. Carters, or
in any Gentlemans Estate, all the Negroes should be sold, and the
money put to Interest in safe hands, and let the Lands which these
Negroes now work lie wholly uncultivated, the bare Interest of I he
Price of the Negroes would be a much greater yearly income than
what is now received from their working the Lands, making no
allowance at all for the trouble and Risk of the Masters as to the
Crops and Negroes. How much greater then must be the value of
an estate here if these poor enslaved Africans were all in their native
desired Country, and in their Room industrious Tenants, who being
bom in freedom, by a laudable care, would not only inrich their
Landlords, but would raise a hardy Offspring to be the strength and
the honour of the Colony.
EXCHANGE
I. Commodity Money
A. Commodity Money in North Carolina, iy4g ^
Throughout the whole of the colonial period there were continuous complaints
■• to the scarcity of money. The reasons for this were obvious : the colonists were
for the most part poor people who did not bring much money with them ; and what
they did bring was speedily sent back to England in exchange for more needed sup-
pttes and manufactured commodities. As the colonies were thus drained of metallic
money resort must be had to substitutes therefor to carry on domestic exchange,
and various commodities were made to do service as money, often being given the
kval tender quality. Such a list as that authorized in North Carolina was fairly
typical ol aU the early colonies.
The Province of North Carolina was first settled by People from
Virginia in low circumstances who moved hither for the benefit of
» UUtr tfCvmnar Johnston to the Board of Trade (1 749), in Colonial Records 0^
North Carolina. Edited by W. L. Saunders (Raleigh, 1886), IV, 920-1.
i
LABOR, EXCHANGE AND POPULATION
97
a larger and better range for their Stocks, from such a small Beginning
it was a great many years before it appeared there was any Increase
of Inhabitants sufficient to form a Government the whole number
of Taxables in Thirty years time not amounting to one thousand, . . .
The poverty of the first inhabitants made (for want of a better
currency) to Enact in their Assemblies that all Payments whatsoever,
might be made in sundry Commodities or Products of the Province
a List whereof here follows, agreeable to the Law as it past upon the
Revise, Anno: 171 5.
£ s.
d.
Indian Corn per bushel
I
8
Tallow per Pound
..
5
Beaver & Otter Skins per Pound
2
6
Butter per Pound
. .
6
Raw buck & Doe Skins per Pound
9
Feathers per Pound
I
4
Pitch per Barrel full gauged
Pork per Barrel
2 5
Tobacco per 100 cwt
10
Wheat per Bushel
3
6
'Leather Tann'd uncurried per pound
8
Wild Cat Skins per piece
I
Cheese per Pound
..
4
Brest Buck & Doe Skins per Pound
2
6
Tar per Barrel full gauged
10
Whale Oil per Barrel
I 10
Beef per Barrel
I 10
This method has been continued down to this time with very little
Alteration to the great Damage of the Revenue it being a stated
rule, that of so many Commodities the worst sort were only paid.
Altho' many attempts have been made to reniedy the Inconvenience
attending such a currency it has always proved fruitless (the People
being generally fond of a Law which gave them such Advantages).
B. Tobacco Notes in Virginia^ lySi ^
In addition to commodities, various forms of representative money were used
by the colonists to make up for the scarcity of coin. Paper money based upon
tobacco, upon land, upon a coin reserve, upon general commodities, and upon the
credit of the government were tried in different colonies, but no one of them stood
the test of time better than the tobacco notes of Virginia. These were first intro-
duced in 1730 and were the subject of considerable legislation thereafter. They
were still in general use in 1781, at which date they are described by Chastellux,
a French officer who served in the Revolution and traveled quite extensively.
^ Travels in North- America, in the Years 1780, 1781, and 1782. By the Marquis
(Franfois Jean) de Chastellux (London, 1787), 131-3.
98 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
We were just going out to take a walk, when we received a visit
from Mr. Victor, whom I had seen at Williamsburgh; . . . [we] put
ourselves under the guidance of Mr. Victor, who first took us to the
warehouses or magazines of tobacco. These warehouses, of which
there are numbers in Virginia, though, unfortunately, great part of
them has been burned by the English, are under the direction of |:
public authority. There are inspectors nominated to prove the
quality of the tobacco brought by the planters, and if found good,
they give a receipt for the quantity. The tobacco may then be con-
sidered as sold, these authentic receipts circulating as ready money
in the country. For example: suppose I have deposited twenty
hogsheads of tobacco at Petersburg, I may go fifty leagues thence
to Alexandria or Fredericksburg, and buy horses, cloths, or any
other article with these receipts, which circulate through a number
of hands before they reach the merchant who purchases the tobacco
for exportation. This is an excellent institution, for by this means
tobacco becomes not only a sort of bank-stock, but current coin.
You often hear the inhabitants say, "This watch cost me ten hogs-
heads of tobacco; this horse fifteen hogsheads; or, I have been offered
twenty, &c." It is true that the price of this article, which seldom
varies in peace, is subject to fluctuations in time of war; but then,
he who receives it in paynient, makes a free bargain, calculates the
risks and expectations, and runs the hazard; in short we may look
on this as a very useful establishment; it gives to commodities
value and circulation, as soon as they are manufactured, and, in some
measure, renders the planter independent of the merchant.
II. Credit Money
A. A Defence of Paper Money by a Colonial Governor, 1^24 ^
In 1690 MiMachusctts, in order to pay the expenses of an expedition against
Caittda, ittued what was probably the first emission of government paper money
in the Britiih Empire, certainly the first in America. The notes were to be redeemed
out of the revenues from taxation, and were limited to a small amount. They
proved to be a great convenience and served their purpose so well that a second issue
waa made in 1 709. This example was followed in time by all the colonies except
North Carolina. Many bad results followed — over-issue, depreciation, postpone-
ment o( redemption, and in some cases repudiation. The British government early
took a determined stand against these issues and instructed the colonial governors
to valo all bills authorising such issues. But the need of money in the colonies was
r«iai4Hi U> tk$ Colonial History of New York. Edited by E. B.
0'CalM»an fAlhany, 1855), V, 735-8, passim.
LABOR, EXCHANGE AND POPULATION 99
o great that in spite of its defects paper money was justified by leading men like
^ranklin and defended by colonial governors like Burnet and Pownall. Burnet,
he author of this letter, was governor of New York.
New York 21^* Nov 1724
My Lords.
.... But this being an Act for making Paper Money, tho'
within my additional Instruction which allows of such Acts when
they are for raising or levying a publick Revenue.
I think myself obliged to offer to your Lordships Reasons that
are in my poor opinion sufficient to justify it and other Acts of this
Nature with the same precaution.
I am very sensible of the disadvantage I lye under in writing
upon this argument, and the misfortune it is to any cause to have
already appeared in an odious hght, as I am but too well convinced
is the case of paper money Acts in the Plantations, by your Lord-
ships last words in your letter of the 17^ of June — That Bills for
encreasing of Paper money will meet with no encouragement — I hope
your Lordships will not think it presumption in me even after this
declaration to endeavor to give you a more favourable opinion of
such Acts and if I go too far in this, it is owing to the encouragement
your Lordships have given me by receiving what I have offered on
all occasions in so kind a manner and admitting the best constructions
that my weak Reasoning will bear.
I have already in my letter of the 12*^ of May last used several
Arguments to justify the Paper Act in New Jersey, and therein I
observed how well the Bills of New York keep up their credit and the
reasons why they have not fall'n in value as those of Carolina and
New England and that under a good regulation these Acts are both
of Service to the Trade of the Plantations and of great Britain, for
which that I may not repeat I beg leave to refer to my said letter of
the 12^^ of May last and desire your Lordships would again take
into your consideration when you are to determine your opinion on
this present Act. . . .
I take the liberty further to observe to your Lordships on how many
occasions the Government of Great Britain has found it impracticable
to raise all the money wanted within the year from whence all the
present debts of the nation have arisen: The same necessity lyes
often upon the Plantations where frequenty a sum of ready money is
wanted, which it would be an intollerable Tax to raise at once, and
therefore they are forced to imitate the Parliament at home, in
anticipating upon remote funds. And as there is no Bank nor
loo READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
East India company nor even private subscribers capable of lending
the Province the money they want at least without demanding
the extravagant Interest of 8 P^ Cent which is the common Interest
here, but would ruin the Publick to pay since this is a Case [where]
there is no possible way left to make distant funds provide ready
money, when it is necessarily wanted, but making paper Bills to be
sunk by such funds. Without this Carolina would have been ruined
by their Indian War Boston could not now support theirs nor could
any of the Provinces have furnished such considerable Sums to the
Expeditions against Canada. Nor could at present any of the neces-
sary repairs of this Fort be provided for, nor the arrears of the
Revenue be discharged, which is done by this Act in a Tax to be levied
in 4 years nor indeed any publick Service readily and suflficiently
effected.
And I may add one thing more that this manner of compulsive
credit does in fact keep up its value here and that it occasions much
more Trade and business than would be without it and that more
Specie b exported to England by reason of these Paper Bills than
could be if there was no circulation but of Specie for which reason
all the merchants here seem now well satisfied with it.
I hope your Lordships will excuse my being so long and earnest
upon this head because it is a subject of the greatest importance tc
all the Plantations and what I humbly conceive has often been mis-
represented by the Merchants in London. . . .
Your Ldp*s mo. obt & mo. humble St.
Sg^ W. Burnet.
B. Tki Land Bank and the Extension of the Buhhle Act to the Colonies
174J '
In order to provide the people with a medium of exchange the colonial govern
BBfent oC Maasachusetts had for some years issued treasury notes which were to b<
redeemed out of taxes, and which circulated freely as money. But in i73g ih"
govcnior was instructed not to issue any more and to redeem those outstanding
Fearful of the effects of such a sudden contraction of the currency a scheme \va
brought forward by a group of citizens for a Land Bank, which should issue note
upon the security of land or commodities. This was opposed by the merchant 1
<d Boiloo, who organieed in opposition a Silver Bank, which issued notes upon ;
depoiit of tilver. The opponents of the Land Bank, among whom Hutchinson wa
a ICMJer, alio bvoked the authority of Parliament to put an end to it. In i72«
PBfttamttt had passed the Bubble Act (6 Geo. I, ch. 18), directed against specula,
» Tk0 Biihryof MassackuseUsJrom the First SeUlemetU thereof in 1628, unii\
Ikt Ymr 1750. By Thomas Hutchinson (3d edition, Boston, 1 795) , II, 35 2-5 •
LABOR, EXCHANGE AND POPULATION loi
tive companies, and they now declared that this act "did, does, and shall extend
to the colonies in America." This act was retroactive and hence especially arbi-
trary. John Adams gave it as his opinion that this measure was more important
than the Stamp Act in arousing opposition in Massachusetts to the English
government.
A general dread of drawing in all the paper money without a
substitution of any other instrument of trade in the place of it, dis-
posed a great part of the Province to favour what was called the
land bank or manufactory scheme, which was began or rather revived
in this year 1739, and produced such great and lasting mischiefs,
that a particular relation of the rise, progress and overthrow of it
may be of use to discourage and prevent any attempts of the like
nature in future ages. By a strange conduct in the general court,
they had been issuing bills of credit for eight or ten years annually
for charges of government, and being willing to ease each present
year, they had put off the redemption of the bills as far as they could ;
but the governor being restrained by his instruction from going
beyond the year 1741, that year was unreasonably loaded with thirty
or forty thousand pounds sterling taxes, which, according to the
general opinion of the people, it was impossible to levy, not only
on account of the large sum, but because all the bills in the Province
were but just sufficient to pay it, and there was very little silver or
gold, which by an act of government was allowed to be paid for
taxes as equivalent to the bills. A scheme was laid before the general
court by the author of this history, then one of the representatives
of Boston, in which it was proposed to borrow in England upon
interest, and to import into the Province, a sum in silver equal to
all the bills then extant, and therewith to redeem them from posses-
sors, and furnish a currency for the inhabitants, and to repay the
silver at distant periods, which would render the burden of taxes
tolerable by an equal division on a number of future years, and would
prevent the distress of trade by the loss of the only instrument, the
bills of credit, without another provided in its place. But this
proposal was rejected. . . . Royal instructions were no bar to the
proceedings of private persons. The project of a bank in the year
1 7 14 was revived. The projector of that bank now put himself at
the head of seven or eight hundred persons, some few of rank and
good estate, but generally of low condition among the plebians, and
of small estate, and many of them perhaps insolvent. This notable
company were to give credit to 150,000!. lawful money, to be issued
in bifls, each person being to mortgage a real estate in proportion
X02 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
to the sums he subscribed and took out, or to give bond with two
sureties, but personal security was not to be taken for more than
xod. from any one person. Ten directors and a treasurer were to be
chosen by the company. Every subscriber or partner was to pa\
three per cent, interest for the sum taken out, and five per cent, of
the principal; and he that did not pay bills might pay the produce and
manufacture of the Province at such rates as the directors from time
to time should set, and they should commonly pass in lawful money.
The pretence was that, by thus furnishing a medium and instrument
of trade, not only the inhabitants in general would be better able to
procure the Province bills of credit for their taxes, but trade, foreign
and inland, would revive and flourish. The fate of the project was
thought to depend upon the opinion which the general court should
form of it. It was necessary therefore to have a house of represen-
tatives well disposed. Besides the eight hundred persons subscribers,
the needy part of the Province in general favoured the scheme. One
of their votes will go as far in popular elections as one of the most
opulent. The former are most numerous, and it appeared that by
iir the majority of the representatives for 1740 were subscribers to or
favourers of the scheme, and they have ever since been distinguished
by the name of the land bank house.
Men of estates and the principal merchants in the Province ab-
horred the project and refused to receive the bills, but great numbers
of shop-keepers, who had lived for a long time before upon the fraud
of a depreciating currency, and many small traders, gave credit to
the bills. The directors, it was said, by a vote of the company,
became traders, and issued just what bills they thought proper with-
out any fund or security for their ever being redeemed. They pur-
chased ever)' sort of commodity, ever so much a drug, for the sake
of pushing off their bills, and by one means or other a large sum,
perhaps fifty or sixty thousand pounds, was abroad. To lessen the
temptation to receive the bills, a company of merchants agreed to
iitue their notes, or bills- redeemable by silver and gold at distant
periods, much like the scheme in 1733, and attended with no better
effect. The governor exerted himself to blast this fraudulent under-
taking, the land bank. Not only such civil and military officers as
were directors or partners, but all who received or paid any of the bills,
were displaced. The governor negatived the person chosen speaker
ci the bouse, being a director of the bank, and afterwards negatived
thirteen of the new-elected counsellor's who were directors or part-
in or reputed favourers of the scheme. But all was insuffltient
LABOR, EXCHANGE AND POPULATION 103
to suppress it. Perhaps the major part, in number, of the inhabitants
of the Province, openly or secretly were well-wishers to it. One of
the directors afterwards acknowledged to me, that although he en-
tered into the company with a view to the public interest, yet when
he found what power and influence they had in all public concerns,
he was convinced it was more than belonged to them, more than they
could make a good use of, and therefore unwarrantable. Many of the
most sensible discreet persons in the Province saw a general confusion
at hand. The authority of parliament to control all public and private
persons and proceedings in the colonies was, in that day, questioned
by nobody. Application was therefore made to parliament for an
act to suppress the company, which, notwithstanding the opposition
made by their agent, was very easily obtained, and therein it was
declared that the act of the 6th of king George I. chapter the eighteenth,
did, does and shall extend to the colonies and plantations in America.
It was said the act of George I. when it passed, had no relation to
America, but another act twenty years after gave it a force even
from the passing it, which it never could have had without. This
was said to be an instance of the transcendent power of parliament.
Although the company was dissolved, yet the act of parliament gave
the possessors of the bills a right of action against every partner or
director for the sums expressed with interest. The company were
in a maze. At a general meeting some, it was said, were for running
all hazards, although the act subjected them to a praemunire, but
the directors had more prudence, and advised them to declare that
they considered themselves dissolved, and met only to consult upon
some method of redeeming their bills from the possessors, which every
man engaged to endeavour in proportion to his interest, and to pay
in to the directors or some of them to burn or destroy. Had the
company issued their bills at the value expressed in the face of them,
they would have had no reason to complain of being obliged to redeem
them at the same rate; but as this was not the case in general, and
many of the possessors of the bills had acquired them for half their
value, as expressed, equity could not be done, and so far as respected
the company, perhaps, the parliament was not very anxious, the
loss they sustained being but a just penalty for their unwarrant-
able undertaking if it had been properly applied. Had not the
parliament interposed, the Province would have been in the utmost
confusion, and the authority of government entirely in the land
bank company.
I04 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
C. The Necessity of Paper Money in the Colonies, 1764 ^
The stoi^Mige of the trade uith the Spanish West Indies by the enforcement of
the navigation acts cut ofif from the British colonies in America their chief source
of silver, while they were drained of their existing supply by an adverse balance of
trade with England. This was urged by many as an argument for the emission of
paper money by the colonies, and is so used by ex-Governor Pownall in the extract
here given.
The British American Colonies have not, within themselves, the
means of making money or coin. They cannot acquire it from
Great Britain; the balance of trade being against them. The returns
of those branches of commerce, in which they are permitted to trade
to any other part of Europe, are but barely sufficient to pay this
balance. — By the present act of navigation, they are prohibited from
trading with the Colonies of any other nations: so that there re-
mains nothing but a small branch of African trade, and the scrambling
profits of an undescribed traffic, to supply them with silver. However,
matters have been so managed, that the general currency of the
Colonies, used to be in Spanish and Portugese coin. This supplied
the internal circulation of their home business, and always finally
came to England, in payments for what the Colonists exported from
hence. If the act of navigation should be carried into such rigorous
execution, as to cut off this supply of a silver currency to the Colonies;
the thoughts of administration should be turned to the devising some
means, of suppl>4ng the Colonies with money of some sort or
other: . . .
. . . The remedy lies in a certain address in carr>'ing in execution
the act of navigation — but if that remedy is neglected; the next
recourse must lie in some means of maintaining a currency specially
appropriated to the Colonies; and must be partly, such as will keep
a certain quantity of silver coin in circulation there — and partly,
such as shall establish a paper curreiuy, holding a value nearly equal
to silver
In Colonics, ine essence of whose nature requires a progressive
increase of settlements and trade, and yet who from the balance of
trade with the mother country, being against them, must suffer a
OODStantly decreasing quantity of silver money; a certain quantity of
fcfer-money^ is necessary. It is necessary, to keep up the increasing
operations of this trade, and the settlements: it is also necessary,
fa such drcunistances, to the equal distribution and general applica-
« A4mimitkati^ of tks BrUish Colonies. By Thomas Pownall (sth edition,
" 1774), 1, 180- 1, x86, 194.
LABOR, EXCHANGE AND POPULATION 105
tion of these benefits to the whole Colony: which benefits would
otherwise become a monopoly to the monied merchant only: it is
prudent, and of good policy in the mother coun ry to permit it, as
it is the surest means of drawing the balance of the Colony trade and
culture, to its own profit.
III. Retail Trade
Market at Philadelphia, 1^48 ^
Markets and fairs were still of general use in the middle of the eighteenth
century in bringing buyers and sellers together. The market at Philadelphia was
probably the most important of its kind in America, and served a very useful purpose.
But it is much to be feared that the trade of Philadelphia, and of
all the English colonies, will rather decrease than increase, in case
no provision is made to prevent it. I shall hereafter plainly shew
upon what foundation this decrease of trade is likely to take place.
The town not only furnishes most of the inhabitants of Pensyl-
vania with the goods which they want, but numbers of the inhabitants
of New Jersey come every day and carry on a great trade.
The town has two great fairs every year; one in May, and the other
in November, both on the sixteenth days of those two months. But
besides these fairs, there are every week two market days, viz. Wednes-
day and Saturday. On those days the country people of Pensylvania
and New Jersey bring to town a quantity of victuals, and other
productions of the country, and this is a great advantage to the town.
It is therefore to be wished that the like regulation might be made in
our Swedish towns. You are sure to meet with every produce of
the season, which the country affords, on the market-days. But
on other days they are in vain sought for.
Provisions are always to be got fresh here, and for that reason
most of the inhabitants never buy more at a time than what will be
sufficient till the next market-day. In summer there is a market
almost every day; for the victuals do not keep well in the great heat.
There are two places in the town where these markets are kept; but
that near the court-house is the principal. It begins about four or
five o'clock in the morning, and ends about nine o'clock in the forenoon.
The town is not enclosed, and has no other custom-house than the
great one for the ships. . . .
^ Travels into North America. By Peter Kalm (London, 1771). In Pinkerton,
Voyages and Travels, XIII, 394-5.
i<^ READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
The country people come to market in New York twice a week,
much in the same manner as they do at Philadelphia; with this
(liffer,.ni .. that the markets are here kept in several places.
POPULATION
I. Growth of the Population
A. The Increase of Mankindy 7755 ^
The Twpid increase of the population in a new country like the American colonies,
wbere Und was plentiful and marriages early, was the subject of comment by more
than one observer. No one has stated the case more scientifically than Franklin.
6. Land being thus plenty in Atnerua, and so cheap as that a
labouring Man, that understands Husbandry, can in a short Time
save Money enough to purchase a Piece of new Land sufficient for
a Plantation, whereon he may subsist a Family; such are not afraid to
marry; for if they even look far enough forward to consider how their
Children when grown up are to be provided for, they see that more
Land is to be had at Rates equally easy, all Circumstances considered.
7. Hence Marriages in America are more general, and more gen-
erally early, than in Europe. And if it is reckoned there, that there
is but one Marriage per annum among 100 Persons, perhaps we may
here reckon two; and if in Europe they have but four Births to a
Marriage (many of their Marriages being late) we may here reckon
eight, of which if one half grow up, and our Marriages are made,
reckoning one with another at twenty Years of Age, our People must
at least be doubled every twenty Years.
8. But notwithstanding this Increase, so vast is the Territory of
Nofth-Amfricay that it will require many Ages to settle it fully; and
till it is fully settled, Labour will never be cheap here, where no
Man continues long a Labourer for others, but gets a Plantation
of his own, no Man continues long a Journeyman to a Trade, but
foet among those new Settlers, and sets up for himself, &c. Heiu c
Labour is no cheaper now, fn Pensylvania, than it was thirty Years
ago, tho'soniany Thousand labouring People have been imported. . . .
ax. The Importation of Foreigners into a Country that has as
many Inhabitants as the present Employments and Provisions for
Sttbiittcnce will bear, will be in the End no Increase of People, unless
• Ohitnaiiom Concerning the Increase of Mankind and the Peopling of Countries.
By B«ijtnia Franklin (Botion, 1755), 44-5, 51-4. Also in Works (Sparks cdi-
1, 1840), 11,312-4.
LABOR, EXCHANGE AND POPULATION 107
the New-comers have more Industry and Frugality than the Natives,
and then they will provide more Subsistence and increase in the
Country; but they will gradually eat the Natives out. — Nor is it
necessary to bring in Foreigners to fill up any occasional Vacancy
in a Country; for such Vacancy (if the Laws are good, § 14, 16)
will soon be filled by natural Generation. Who can now find the
Vacancy made in Sweden, France, or other warlike Nations, by the
Plague of Heroism 40 Years ago; in France, by the Expulsion of
the Protestants; in England, by the Settlement of her Colonies; or in
Guinea, by 100 Years Exportation of Slaves that has blackened half
America? — The Thinness of Inhabitants in Spain, is owing to national
Pride and Idleness, and other Causes, rather than to the Expulsion
of the Moors, or to the making of new Settlements.
22. There is in short no Bound to the prolific Nature of Plants
or Animals, but what is made by their crowding and interfering
with each other's Means of Subsistence. Was the Face of the Earth
vacant of other Plants, it might be gradually sowed and overspread
with one Kind only; as for Instance, with Fennel; and were it empty
of other Inhabitants, it might in a few Ages be replenished from one
Nation only; as for Instance, with Englishmen. Thus there are sup-
posed to be now upwards of one Million English Souls in North-
America, (tho' 'tis thought scarce 80,000 have been brought over
Sea) and yet perhaps there is not one the fewer in Britain, but rather
many more, on Account of the Employment the Colonies afford to
Manufacturers at Home. This Million doubling, suppose but once
in 25 Years, will in another Century be more than the People of
England, and the greatest number of Englishmen will be on this Side
the Water. What an Accession of Power to the British Empire by
Seaas well as Land! What Increase of Trade and Navigation! What
Numbers of Ships and Seamen! We have been here but little more
than 100 Years, and yet the Force of our Privateers in the late War,
united, was greater, both in Men and Guns, than that of the whole
British Navy in Queen Elizabeth's Time. — How important an Affair
then to Britain is the present Treaty for settling the Bounds between
her Colonies and the French, and how careful should she be to secure
Room enough, since on the Room depends so much the Increase of
her People? . . .
24. Which leads me to add one Remark: That the Number of
purely white People in the World is proportionably very small. All
Africa is black or tawny. Asia chiefly tawny. America (exclusive
of the new Comers) wholly so. And in Europe, the Spaniards^
io8
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
Itaiians, and French, are generally of what we call a swarthy Com-
plexion; the more northern Nations with the English, making the
principal body of White People on the Face of the Earth. I could
wish their Numbers were increased. And while we are, as I may call
it, Scouring our Planet, by clearing America of Woods, and so making
thb Side of our Globe reflect a brighter Light to the Eyes of Inhabit-
ants in Mars or Venus, why should we in the Sight of Superior
Beings, darken its People? Why increase the sons of Africa, by
Planting them in America, where we have so fair an Opportunity,
by excluding all Blacks and Tawnys, of increasing the lovely White
and Red? But perhaps I am partial to the Complexion of my
Country, for such Kind of Partiality is natural to Mankind.
B. Population of the British American Colonies, 17 52-17 55 ^
The following estimate of the population of the colonies in the middle of the
x8th century was made up from the reports of the governors to the Lords of Trade.
An Account of the Number of White Inhabitants in His Majesty's
Colonies in North America distinguishing the Number of
the Militia or of Men capable of bearing Arms; taken from
the last Returns transmitted to the Lords Commissioners
for Trade & Plantations, and, where those Returns are de-
fective, from the best accounts which can be obtained.
Coloak*
Dates of the returns
Total Num-
ber of Whites
Militia
Men Cap-
able of bear-
ing arms
Georsb
1752
3,000
South Carolina
1752
25,000
5,000
North Carolina
1 755
50,000
13,000
Virginia
1755
125,000
28,000
Maryland
1749
100,000
12,500
Pomtylvania
No retiuTis since the Year
* 220,000
25,000
Connecticut
1730; but according to
100,000
Rbock Island
the best Accounts
30,000
New Jcrwy
1755
75,000
10,000
NewYorIt \
No returns since the Year
5S»ooo
12,000
MaaMchuaetU Bay /
1738; but according to
the best Accounts
200,000
40,000
New Hampshire
1755
75.000
6,000
Nova Scotia
X75;
Total.
4,000
1, 06a, 000
1,200
1
* Of these 100^
) arc German and other foi
eign Protes
tants.
<y
fdalit U> the Cohniul History of New York. Edited by E. E
(Albany, 1855). VI. 003.
LABOR, EXCHANGE AND POPULATION 109
C. Large Families in America ^ 1748 ^
More than one traveler in the colonies noticed the large families and the rapid
growth of the population under the favoring conditions of a new country. The
population doubled about once in twenty-three years, which is an extremely rapid
rate of growth. Kalm, ever a scientific observer, collected the following interesting
data on this point.
It does not seem difficult to find out the reasons why the people
multiply more here than in Europe. As soon as a person is old
enough, he may marry in these provinces, without any fear of poverty;
for there is such a tract of good ground yet uncultivated, that a new-
married man can, without difficulty, get a spot of ground, where he
may sufficiently subsist with his wife and children. The taxes are
very low, and he need not be under any concern on their account.
The liberties he enjoys are so great that he considers himself as a
prince in his possessions. I shall here demonstrate, by some plain
examples, what effect such a constitution is capable of.
Maons Keen, one of the Swedes in Raccoon, was now near seventy
years old: he had many children, grandchildren, and great-grand-
children; so that, of those who were yet alive, he could muster up
forty-five persons. Besides them, several of his children and grand-
children died young, and some in a mature age. He was, therefore
uncommonly blessed. Yet his happiness is not comparable to that
which is to be seen in the following examples, and which I have
extracted from the Philadelphia gazette.
In the year 1732, died at Ipswich, in New England, Mrs. Sarah
Tuthil, a widow, aged eighty-six years. She had brought sixteen
children into the world; and from seven of them only she had seen
one hundred and seventy-seven grand-children and great-grand-
children.
In 1739, May 30th, the children, grand, and great-grand-children
of Mr. Richard Buttington, in the parish of Chester, in Pensylvania,
were assembled in his house; and they made together one hundred
and fifteen persons. The parent of these children, Richard Butting-
ton, who was born in England, was then entering into his eighty-fifth
year; and was at that time quite active, fresh, and sensible. His
eldest son, then sixty years old, was the first Englishman born in
Pensylvania.
^ Travels into North America. By Peter Kalm (London, 1770). In Pinkerton,
Voyages and Travels, XIII, 504-5.
no READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
In 1742, 8th of Jan., died at Trenton, in New Jersey, Mrs. Sarah |
Furman, a widow, aged ninety-seven years. She was born in New
England, and left five children, sixty-one grand-children, one hundred
and eighty-two great-grand-children, and twelve great-great-grand-
children, who were all alive when she died.
In 1739, 28th of Jan., died at South Kingston, in New England,
Mrs. Maria Hazard, a widow, in the hundredth year of her age. |
She was born in Rhode Island, and was the grandmother of thci^
then vice-governor of that island, Mr. George Hazard. She could j
count altogether five hundred children, grand-children, great-grand- 1
children, and great-great-grand-children. When she died two hun-j
dred and five persons of them were alive; a grand-daughter of hersj-
had already been grandmother near fifteen years. |
In this manner, the usual wish of blessing in our liturgy,^ that i
the new-married couple may see their grandchildren, till the third,]
and fourth generation, has been literally fulfilled in regard to somti
of these persons.
II. Condition of the People
A. A Prosperous People, 7775 ^
The anonymous author of American Husbandry gives a more favorable accoun;
of the inhabitants than he does of the agriculture of the colonies. His accouni
»s evidently based upon association with the more well-to-do members of the popu-
lation, but probably does not overstate the prosperity of the community as a whole
There is in many respects a great resemblance between New Eng-
land and Great Britain. In the best cultivated parts of it, you woulc
not in travelling through the country, know, from its appearance
that you were from home. The face of the country has in genera
a cultivated, inclosed, and chearful prospect; the farm-houses an
well and substantially built, and stand thick; gentlemen's house
appear every where, and have an air of a wealthy and contentec
people. Poor, strolling and ragged beggars are scarcely ever to b»
seen; all the inhabitants of the country appear to be well fed, cloathed
and lodged, nor is any where a greater degree of independency, an(
liberty to be met with: nor is that distinction of the ranks and classe
to be found which we see in Britain, but which is infinitely mow
apparent in France and other arbitrary countries. . . .
* Mr. Kalm speaks here of the Swedish liturgy.
» American Husbandry. By an American (London, 1775), t, 61-2, 70-1
184-5, 187-8.
LABOR, EXCHANGE AND POPULATION
III,-
Respecting the lower classes in New England, there is scarcely
iny part of the world in which they are better off. The price of labour
s very high, and they have with this advantage another no less valu-
able, of being able to take up a tract of land whenever they are able
to settle it. In Britain a servant or labourer may be master of thirty
or forty pounds without having it in their power to lay it out in
one useful or advantageous purpose; it must be a much larger sum
to enable them to hire a farm, but in New England there is no such
thing as a man procuring such a sum of money by his industry without
his taking a farm and settling upon it. The daily instances of this
give an emulation to all the lower classes and make them point their
endeavours with peculiar industry to gain an end which they all
esteem so particularly flattering.
This great ease of gaining a farm, renders the lower class of people
very industrious; which, with the high price of labour, banishes
everything that has the least appearance of begging, or that wander-
ing, destitute state of poverty, which we see so common in England.
A traveller might pass half through the colony without finding,
from the appearance of the people, that there was such a thing as
a want of money among theni. . . .
This country [Pennsylvania] is peopled by as happy and free a
set of men as any in America. Out of trade there is not much wealth
to be found, but at the same time there is very little poverty, and
hardly such a thing as a beggar in the province. This is not only a
consequence of the plenty of land and the rate of labour, but also
of the principles of the Quakers, who have a considerable share in the
government of the country. It is much to the honour of this sect
that they support their own poor in all countries, in a manner much
more respectable than known in any other religion. . . .
Their meals are three times a day, and served quite in the English
taste: coffee, tea, and chocolate, are of the best sorts, cheap enough
to be commanded in plenty by every planter, especially coffee and
chocolate; sugar also is cheaper than in England; these, with good
bread and good butter, give a breakfast superior to what gentlemen
of small estates usually make in England. For dinner and supper
they are much better supplied, as may easily be supposed, when the
plenty is considered that abounds in an American plantation: game,
variety of fish, venison almost every where, poultry in prodigious
plenty and variety, meat of all kinds, very good, and killed on every
plantation of any size; several sorts of fruits, in a plenty surpassing
any thing known in the best climates of Europe, such as melons,
ixa^ READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
water-melons, and cucumbers, in the open field; apples, pears, cher-
ries, peaches, nectarines, goose-berries, currants, strawberries, and ras-
berries, gathering some every month from May till October. Their
grapes, though plentiful to excess, are inferior. These are circum-
stances that make it neither difficult nor expensive to keep an excellent
table. The wine commonly drank is Madeira, at not more than half
the price of England; freight is cheaper, and there is none, or a very
trifling duty. French and Spanish wines are also drank; rum is
very cheap; and good beer is brewed by those who are attentive to
the operation.
From hence it is sufficiently clear, that the time passed at the
table need not be a barren entertainment.
B. The People of New York, 1759 ^
The inhabitants of New York were more sociable than the New Englanders,
and as prosperous as those of any of the colonies. Bumaby was an English clergy-
man, who traveled extensively throughout the colonies, and wrote entertainingly
of his impressions.
The inhabitants of New York, in their character, very much
resemble the Pensylvanians: more than half of them are Dutch,
and almost all traders: they are, therefore, habitually frugal, indus-
trious, and parsimonious. Being however of different nations, differ-
ent languages, and different religions, it is almost impossible to
give them any precise or determinate character. The women are
handsome and agreeable; though rather more reserved than the
Philadelphian ladies. Their amusements are much the same as in
Pensylvania; viz. balls, and sleighing expeditions in the winter;
and, in the summer, going in parties upon the water, and fishing; or
making excursions into the country. . . .
The present state of this province is flourishing: it has an exten-
sive trade to many parts of the world, particularly to the West Indies;
and has acquired great riches by the commerce which it has carried
on, under flags of truce, to Cape-Francois and Monte-Christo. The
troops, by having made it the place of their general rendezvous, have
alio enriched it very much. However, it is burthened with taxes,
and the present public debt amounts to more than 300,0001. currency.
The taxes are laid upon estates real and personal; and there are
• ffdMb ikrougk Iks MiddU Settlements of North- A merka, in the Years 1759 and
if6o. By Andrew Bumaby (London, 1775), 66-7. j
LABOR, EXCHANGE AND POPULATION
"3
duties upon Negroes, and other importations. The provincial troops
are about 2600 men. The difference of exchange between currency
and bills, is from 70 to 80 per cent.
C. An Adverse View of Virginians, ly^g *
An unfriendly characterization of the inhabitants of Virginia is given by
Bumaby.
From what has been said of this colony [Virginia], it will not be
difficult to form an idea of the character of its inhabitants. The
climate and external appearance of the country conspire to make
them indolent, easy, and good-natured ; extremely fond of society, and
much given to convivial pleasures. In consequence of this, they
seldom show any spirit of enterprise, or expose themselves willingly
to fatigue. Their authority over their slaves renders them vain
and imperious, and entire strangers to that elegance of sentiment,
which is so peculiarly characteristic of refined and polished nations.
Their ignorance of mankind and of learning, exposes them to many
errors and prejudices, especially in regard to Indians and negroes,
whom they scarcely consider as of the human species; so that it is
almost impossible, in cases of violence, or even murder, committed
upon those unhappy people by any of the planters, to have the de-
linquents brought to justice; for either the grand-jury refuse to find
the bill, or the petit jury bring in their verdict, not guilty.
The display of a character thus constituted, will naturally be in
acts of extravagance, ostentation, and a disregard of economy; it is
not extraordinary, therefore, that the Virginians out-run their in-
comes; and that having involved themselves in difficulties, they are
frequently tempted to raise money by bills of exchange, which they
know will be returned protested, with ten per cent, interest.
The public or political charrxter of the Virginians corresponds
with their private one: they are haughty and jealous of their liberties,
impatient of restraint, and can scarcely bear the thought of being
controuled by any superior power. Many of them consider the
colonies as independent states, not connected with Great Britain,
otherwise than by having the same common King, and being bound
to her by natural affection. There are but few of them that have
a turn for business, and even those are by no means expert at it. I
^ Travels through the Middle Settlements in North- America, in the Years 1759 and
1760. By Andrew Burnaby (London, 1775). In Pinkerton, Voyages and Travels,
XIII, 714-6.
114 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
have known them, upon a very urgent occasion, vote the relief of a
garrison, without once considering whether the thing was practicable..
when it was most evidently and demonstrably otherwise. In matters
of commerce they are ignorant of the necessary principles that must
prevail between a colony and the mother country; they think it a
hardship not to have an unlimited trade to every part of the world.
They consider the duties upon their staples as injurious only to them-
selves; and it is utterly impossible to persuade them that they affect
the consumer also. However, to do them justice, the same spirit
of generosity prevails here which does in their private character;
they never refuse any necessary supplies for the support of govern-
ment when called upon, and are a generous and loyal people. . . .
The Carolinians live in much the same easy and luxurious manner
as the Virginians. The planters are remarkably hospitable towards
strangers; and persons who fall into distress through bad success
or misfortune scarce ever fail of being reHeved by their liberality;
so that beggary is almost unknown in these parts of the world.
There are supposed to be 300,000 souls in North Carolina, amongst
whom are great numbers of Negroes and other slaves. The taxable?
in 1773 were computed to amount to 64,000: the number of Negroes
and Mulattoes about 10,000.
!''>
CHAPTER IV
ENGLISH COLONIAL THEORY AND POLICY, 1651-1763
I. The Mercantile System
A Modern Interpretation, 1882^
The most scholarly and philosophical view of the body of economic practices
ind doctrines of the sixteenth, seventeenth, and eighteenth centuries, known as
Viercantilism, is that of Professor Schmollcr, in the essay here quoted. Professor
khmoller is professor of economic history in the University of Berlin.
Yet this very time, — the second half of the sixteenth cen-
:ury and the seventeenth century, — was an epoch which gave
ivery inducement for an economic transformation. The way
wras already clear, out of the narrow circle of the small terri-
tory into the larger union of forces possible only in the great
state. An immeasurable horizon had been opened to the
world's trade in India and America; the possession of spice colonies,
and of the new gold and silver countries, promised measureless riches
to those states that understood how to seize their share of the booty.
iBut it was clear that for such purposes it was necessary to have power-
ful fleets, and either great trading companies or equivalent state
organisations. At home, also, economic changes, of no less impor-
tance, took place. The new postal services created an altogether
new system of communication. Bills of exchange, and the large
exchange operations at certain fairs, together with the banks which
were now making their appearance, produced an enormous and far-
I reaching machinery of credit. The rise of the press gave birth to
a new kind of public opinion, and to a crowd of newspapers which
cooperated with the postal service in transforming the means of
communication. Moreover, there now took place in several countries
a geographical division of labour, which broke up the old many-
sidedness of town industry; here the woollen manufacture was group-
^ The Mercantile System and Us Historical Significance. By Gustav SchmoUer.
In Economic Classics. Edited by W.J.Ashley (New York, 1896), 46-69, passim.
Printed by permission of the publishers, The Macmillan Company.
k
ii6 RE.\DINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
ing itself in certain neighborhoods and around certain towns, there
the linen manufacture; here the tanning trade, there the hardware
trade. The old handicraft (Handwerk) began to convert itself into
a domestic industry {II aus Industrie) ; ^ the old staple trade, carried
on in person by the travelling merchants, began to assume its modern
shape with agents, commission dealers, and speculation.
These forces all converging impelled society to some large economic
reorganisation on a broader basis, and pointed to the creation of
national states with a corresponding policy. . . . What, to each in
its time, gave riches and superiority first to Milan, Venice, Florence,
and Genoa; then, later, to Spain and Portugal; and now to Holland,
France, and England, and, to some extent, to Denmark and Sweden,
was a state policy in economic matters, as superior to the territorial
as that had been to the municipal. . . . States arose, forming united,
and therefore strong and wealthy, economic bodies, quite different
from earlier conditions; in these, quite unlike earlier times, the
state organisation assisted the national economy and this the state
policy; and, quite unlike earlier times too, public finance served as
the bond of union between political and economic life. . . .
Herein economic and pohtical interests went hand in hand. . . .
The whole internal history of the seventeenth and eighteenth
centuries, not only in Germany, but everywhere else, is summed
up in the opposition of the economic policy of the state to that
of the town, the district, and the several Estates; the whole
foreign history is summed up in the opposition to one another of the
separate interests of the newly rising states, each of which sought
to obtain and retain its place in the circle of European nations, and
in that foreign trade which now included America and India. Ques-
tions of political power were at issue which were, at the same time,
questions of economic organisation. What was at stake was the
creation of real political economies as unified organisms, the center
of which should be, not merely a state policy reaching out in all direc-
tions, but rather the living heartbeat of a united sentiment.
Only he who thus conceives of mercantilism will understand it;
in its innermost kernel it is nothing but state making — not state
» Hauiindustrit and Domestic System are terms which came to be employed
in Gemuoy ftnd England to designate the industrial conditions destroyed or threat-
ened by the Factory System, to which they presented the contrast that the work was
done in the workman's home. But they are now used by economic historians as
more or tern technical terms to describe a stage in industrial development marked
by other and even more important traiU.
ENGLISH COLONIAL THEORY AND POLICY 117
making in a narrow sense, but state making and national-economy
making at the same time; state making in the modern sense, which
creates out of the political community an economic community,
and so gives it a heightened meaning. The essence of the system
lies not in some doctrine of money or of the balance of trade; not in
tariff barriers, protective duties, or navigation laws; but in something
far greater: — namely, in the total transformation of society and its
organisation, as well as of the state and its institutions, in the replacing
of a local and territorial economic policyby thatof the national state
If we pause for a while to consider this foreign and external
economic policy of the European states of the seventeenth and eigh-
teenth centuries — which it has hitherto been the custom to regard as
the essential feature of the mercantile system, — it is not, of course,
our purpose to describe the details of its several forms. The general
features of its regulations are well enough known. Difficulties were
put in the way of the importation of manufactured goods; and their
production and exportation were favoured by the prohibition of the
export of raw materials, by bounties on export, and by commercial
treaties. Encouragement was given to domestic shipping, to the
fisheries, and to the coasting trade by restricting or forbidding
foreign competition. Commerce with the colonies and the supplying
of them with European wares, was reserved for the mother country.
The importation of colonial produce had to take place directly from
the colony itself, and not by way of European ports; and everywhere
an attempt was made to establish direct trading relations by great
privileged trading companies and by state aid in manifold ways.
England promoted the export of corn and the prosperity of agricul-
ture at the same time by the payment of bounties; France hindered
the export of corn for the benefit of industry; Holland, in its later
days, sought to create very large stores of corn and a very free trade
in corn so as both to insure a due domestic supply and to encourage
trade. But, as we have already said, an account of these several
measures would go beyond the purpose of this essay. The general
features are known; the details have even yet not been subjected to
due scientific investigation. Our only purpose here is to grasp the
fundamental ideas of the system; which, naturally, found varying
expression, here in high duties, there in low. Here in the prevention,
there in the encouragement of the corn trade. The thought pursued
everywhere was this: as competition with other countries fluctuated
up and down, to cast the weight of the power of the state into the scales
of the balance in the way demanded in each case by national interests.
ii8 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
/
n. The Engush Colonial Policy
A. Tht Navigation Act of 1660 ^
Tbe Dutch, who were the foremost commercial nation of Europe during the
leventeenth ccntur)', had obuined virtual control of the colonial trade, and in order
to gain this trade for themselves the English government passed a series of meas-
tires, known as the navigation acts, v/hich were designed to restrict the carrying
tiadc between England and her colonies to British ships. These acts had important
effects upon Dutch, English, and colonial shipping. The act of 1660 repeated, and
somewhat extended, in more careful language, the provisions of the act of 1651.
Only the most essential parts of the latter act are here given.
An Act for the Encourageing and increasing of Shipping and
Navigation [1660]
p] For the increase of Shiping and incouragement of the Naviga-
tion of this Nation, wherein under the good providence and protection
of God the Wealth Safety and Strength of this Kingdome is soe
much concerned Bee it Enacted by the Kings most Excellent Majesty
and by the Lords and Commons in this present Parliament assem-
bled and the Authoritie thereof That from and after the First day
of December One thousand six hundred and sixty and from thence
forward noe Goods or Commodities whatsoever shall be Imported
into or Exported out of any Lands Islelands Plantations or Terri-
tories to his Majesty belonging or in his possession or which may
hereafter belong unto or be in the possession of His Majesty His
Heires and Successors in Asia Africa or America in any other Ship
or Ships Vessel! or Vessells whatsoever but in such Ships or Vessells
as doe truely and without f raude belong onely to the people of England
or Ireland Dominion of Wales or Towne of Berwicke upon Tweede,
or are of the built of, and belonging to any of the said Lands Islands
Plantations or Territories as the Proprietors and right Owners therof
and whcrof the Master and three fourthes of the Marriners at least
arc English under the penalty of the Forfeiture and Losse of all
the Goods and Commodityes which shall be Imported into, or Ex-
ported out of, any the aforesaid places in any other Ship or Vessell,
at alfloe of the Ship or Vessell with all its Guns Furniture Tackle
Ammunition and Apparel). . . .
» SUUuUj of thf Realm, V, 24^250; and in Select Charters and other Docu-
menu Ulustntive of American History, 1606-1775, edited by W. Macdonald <Ne\v
York, 1910), iio-iis, Possim. Printed by iwrmission of the editor and the
pubUihen, The Mjicmillan Cum|)any.
ENGLISH COLONIAL THEORY AND POLICY 119
[III.] And it is further Enacted . . . that noe Goods or Com-
modityes whatsoever of the growth production or manufacture of
Africa Asia or America or of any part thereof, or which are described
or laid downe in the usuall Maps or Cards of those places be Imported
into England Ireland or Wales Islands of Guernsey or Jersey or Towne
of Berwicke upon Tweede in any other Ship or Ships Vessell or Ves-
sels whatsoever, but in such as doe truely and without fraude belong
onely to the people of England or Ireland, Dominion of Wales or
Towne of Berwicke upon Tweede or of the Lands Islands Plantations
or Territories in Asia Africa or America to his Majesty belonging as
the proprietors and right owners thereof, and whereof the Master and
three fourthes at least of the Mariners are English under the penalty
of the forfeiture of all such Goods and Commodityes, and of the Ship
or Vessell in which they were Imported with all her Guns Tackle
Furniture Ammunition and Apparell, . . .
[IV.] And it is further Enacted. . . that noe Goods or
Commodityes that are of forraigne growth production or manufacture
and which are to be brought into England Ireland Wales, the Islands
of Guernsey & Jersey or Towne of Berwicke upon Tweede in English
built shiping, or other shiping belonging to some of the aforesaid
places, and navigated by EngHsh Mariners as above-said shall be
shiped or brought from any other place or Places, Country or Coun-
tries but onely from those of their said Growth Production or Manu-
facture, or from those Ports where the said Goods and Commodityes
can onely or are or usually have beene first shiped for transporta-
tion and from none other Places or Countryes under the penalty
of the forfeiture of all such of the aforesaid Goods as shall be
Imported from any other place or Country contrary to the true
intent and meaning hereof, as alsoe of the ship in which they were
imported with all her Guns Furniture Ammunition Tackle and
Apparel, ....
[XVIII.] And it is further Enacted . . . That from and after
. . . [April I, 1 661] . . . noe Sugars Tobaccho Cotton Wool Indi-
coes Ginger Fustick or other dyeing wood of the Growth Production
or Manufacture of any English Plantations in America Asia or Africa
shall be shiped carryed conveyed or transported from any of the said
English Plantations to any Land Island Territory Dominion Port or
place whatsoever other then to such [other] English Plantations as doe
belong to His Majesty His Heires and Successors or to the King-
dome of England or Ireland or Principallity of Wales or Towne of
Berwicke upon Tweede there to be laid on shore under the penalty
I20 READINGS IN ECONOMIC lilSTORV
of the Forfeiture of the said Goods or the full value thereof, as alsoe
of the Ship with all her Guns Tackle Apparel Ammunition and
Furniture, . .
B. The Navigation Act of 1663 ^
While the earlier acts had sought to give to British vessels a monopoly of the
carrying trade between England and her colonies, that of 1663 was designed to
secure to English merchants the profits of handling all goods that were sent to the
ookNues, as these must now be "laden and shipped" in England and from "noe
Other l^JkCe." With the passage of this act colonial trade was brought completely
under Parliamentary control, and subsequent measures aimed simply to strengthen
the Bystem by more detailed regulations.
An Act for the Encouragement of Trade [1663.]
pV.] And in reguard His Majesties Plantations beyond the Seas
are inhabited and peopled by His Subjects of this His Kitigdome of
England, For the maintaining a greater correspondence and kindnesse
betweene them and keepeing them in a firmer dependance upon it,
and rendring them yet more beneficiall and advantagious unto it in
the farther Imployment and Encrease of English Shipping and Sea-
men, vent of English Woollen and other Manufactures and Commodi-
ties rendring the Navigation to and from the same more safe and
cheap>e, and makeing this Kingdome a Staple not onely of the Com-
modities of those Plantations but alsoe of the Commodities of other
Countryes and Places for the suppl>dng of them, and it being the
usage of other Nations to keepe their Plantations Trade to themselves,
Be it enacted and it is hereby enacted That from and after the Five
and twentyeth day of March One thousand six hundred sixtie fower
noe Commoditie of the Growth Production or Manufacture of Europe
shall be imported into any Land Island Plantation Colony Territory
or Place to His Majestie belonging, or which shall hereafter belong
unto, or be in the Possession of His Majestie His Heires and Succes-
sors in Asia Africa or America (Tangier onely excepted) but what shall
be bona fide and without fraude laden and shipped in England Wales
or the Towne of Berwicke upon Tweede and in English built Ship-
ping, . . . and whereof the Master and three Fourthes of the
Maniners at least are English, and which shall be carryed directly
thence to the said Lands Islands Plantations Colonyes Territories
> Statutes of the Realm, V, 449-452; also in Select Charters and other Docu-
menti Qlustntive of American History, 1606-1775, edited by W. Macdonald (New
York, 1910), 133-135. Printed by permission of the editor and the publishers,
The MaanillaD Company.
ENGLISH COLONIAL THEORY AND POLICY 121
or Places, and from noe other place or places whatsoever Any Law
Statute or Usage to the contrary notwithstanding, under the Penaltie
of the losse of all such Commodities of the Growth Production or
Manufacture of Europe as shall be imported into any of them from
any other Place whatsoever by Land or Water, . . .
[v.] Provided alwayes . . . That it shall and may be law-
full to shipp and lade in such Shipps, and soe navigated as in the fore-
goeing Clause is sett downe and expressed in any part of Europe Salt
for the Fisheries of New England and New found land, and to shipp
and lade in the Medera's Wines of the Growth thereof, and to shipp
and lade in the Westerne Islands or Azores Wines of the Growth of
the said Islands, and to shipp and take in Servants or Horses in Scot-
land or Ireland, and to shipp or lade in Scotland all sorts of Victuall
of the Growth or Production of Scotland, and to shipp or lade in Ire-
land all sortes of Victuall of the Growth or Production of Ireland,
and the same to transport into any of the said Lands Islands Planta-
tions Colonyes Territories or Places, Any thing in the foregoing Clause
in the contrary in any wise notwithstanding.
C. The English Colonial System: a Favorable View, 1688^
Sir Josiah Child was the chairman, and virtually the ruler, of the East India
Company for some years, and was therefore greatly interested in the extension of the
commercial power of England and favored the navigation acts. He argues, however,
in the extract here quoted that "Profit and power ought joyntly to be considered,"
and that the encouragement of her shipping would make England a powerful and
wealthy country. This was good mercantilistic doctrine. Child's book was first
published in 1688, and was issued in a much enlarged form in the second edition.
CHAP. IV.
CONCERNING THE ACT OF NAVIGATION
Though this Act be by most concluded a very beneficial Act for
this Kingdom, especially by the Masters and Owners of Shiping, and
by all Sea-men; yet some there are, both wise and honest Gentlemen
and Merchants, that doubt whether the Inconveniencies it hath brought
with it, be not greater than the Conveniencies.
For my own part, I am of opinion that in relation to Trade, Ship-
ping, Profit and Power, it is one of the choicest and most prudent Acts
that ever was made in England, and without which we had not now
been Owners of one half the Shipping, nor Trade, nor employed one
^ A New Discourse of Trade. By Sir Josiah Child (2d edition, London,
1694), 1 1 2-1 14.
122 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
half of the Sea-men which we do at present; but seing time hath
discovered some Inconveniencies in it, if not Defects ^ which in my poor
opinion do admit of an easie Amendment, and seing that the w^ole
Aci\s not approved by unanimous consent, I thought fit to Discourse
a Httle concerning it, wherein after my plain method I shall lay down
such Objections as I have met with, and subjoyn my Answers, with
such Reasons as occur to my memory in confirmation of my own
Opinion.
The Objections against the whole Act are such as these;
Object, i. Some have told me, That I on all occasions magnifie
the Dutch policy in relation to their Trade, and the Dutch have no
Act of Navigation, and therefore they are certainly not always in the
right, as to the understanding of their true Interest in Trade, or else
we are in the wrong in this. I answer, I am yet to be informed
where the Dutch have missed their proper Interest in Trade, but that
which is fit for one Nation to do in relation to their Trade, is not fit
for all, no more than the same Policy is necessary to a prevailing Army
that are Masters of the Field, to an Army of less force, then to be
able to encounter their Enemy at all times and places: The Dutch by
reason of their great Stocks, low Interest, multitude of Merchants and
Shipping, are Masters of the Field in Trade, and therefore have no need
to build Castles, Fortresses and places of Retreat; such I account Laws
of limitation, and securing of Particular Trades to the Natives of any
Kingdom; because they, viz. the Dutch may be well assured. That no
Nation can enter in common with them in any Trade, to gain Bread by it,
while their own use of Money is at 3 per cent, and others at 6 per cent
and upwards, &c. Whereas if we should suffer their Shiping in
common with ours in those Trades, which are secured to the English
by Act of Navigation, they must necessarily in a few Years, for the
reasons above said, eat us quite out of them.
Object. 2. The second Objection to the whole Act is; Some will
confess that as to Merchants and Owners of Ships the Act of Navigation
is eminently beneficial, but say, that Merchants and Owners are but an
inconsiderable number of men in respect of the whole Nation, and
that Interest of the greater number, that our Native Commodities
and Manufactures should be taken from us at the best rates, and
Foreign Commodities sold us at the cheapest, with admission of
Dutch Merchants and Shiping in common with the English, by my own
implication would effect.
My answer is, That I cannot deny but this may be true, if the
present profit of the generality be barely and singly considered ...
ENGLISH COLONIAL THEORY AND POLICY 123
but this Kingdom being an Island, the defence whereof hath alwayes
been our Shiping and Sea-men, it seems to me absolutely necessary that
Profit and power ought joyntly to be considered, and if so, I think none
can deny but the Act of Navigation hath and doth occasion building
and employing three times the number of Ships and Sea-men, that
otherwise we should or would do, and that consequently, // our
Force at Sea were so greatly impared, it would expose us to the receiving
of all kinds of Injuries and A fronts from our Neighbours, and in con-
clusion render us a despicable and miserable People.
OBJECTIONS TO SEVERAL PARTS OF THE ACT OF NAVIGATION
Object, i. The Inhabitants and Planters of our Plantations in
America, say, This Act will in time ruin their Plantations, if they may
not be permitted, at least to carry their Sugars to the best Markets, and
not be compelled to send all to, and receive all Commodities from Engla,nd.
I answer, // they were not kept to the Rules of the Act of Navigation,
the consequence would be, that in a few years the benefit of them would be
wholly lost to the Nation; It being agreeable to the policy of the
Dutch, Danes, French, Spaniards, Portugals and all Nations in the World,
to keep their external Provinces and Collonies in a subjection unto, and
dependency upon their Mother-Kingdom; and if they should not do
so, the Dutch who as I have said, are Masters of the Field in Trade,
would carry away the greatest of advantage by the Plantations, of
all the Princes in Christendom, leaving us and others only the trouble
of breeding men, and sending them abroad to cultivate the Ground,
and have bread for their Industry. . . ,
D. The English Colonial System: an Unfavorable View, lyyd ^
The general policy of England toward her colonies was nowhere so clearly stated
by any contemporary writer as by Adam Smith. He was the intellectual father of
modern individualism, and believed that the state should not interfere in matters
of trade or industry, but should permit the individual to seek his own economic
interests. Consequently he did not approve of the mercantile doctrines which
found their expression in the economic policy of England toward her colonies.
But there are no colonies of which the progress has been more
rapid than that of the English in North America.
Plenty of good land, and liberty to manage their own affairs
^ An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations. By Adam
Smith (Edinburgh, 1776). Edited by Edwin Cannan (London, 1904), 73-86,
passim.
124
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
their own way, seem to be the two great causes of the prosperity of
all new colonies.
In the plenty of good land the English colonies of North America,
though, no doubt, very abundantly provided, are, however, inferior
to those of the Spaniards and Portugueze, and not superior to some of
those possessed by the French before the late war. But the political
institutions of the English colonies have been more favourable to the
improvement and cultivation of this land, than those of any of the
other three nations. . . .
Fourthly, in the disposal of their surplus produce, or of what is
over and above their own consumption, the English colonies have
been more favoured, and have been allowed a more extensive market,
than those of any other European nation. Every European nation
has endeavoured more or less to monopolize to itself the commerce
of its colonies, and, upon that account, has prohibited the ships of
foreign nations from trading to them, and has prohibited them from
importing European goods from any foreign nation. But the manner
in which this monopoly has been exercised in different nations has
been very different.
Some nations have given up the whole commerce of their colonies
to an exclusive company, of whom the colonies were obliged to buy
all such European goods as they wanted, and to whom they were
obliged to sell the whole of their own surplus produce. . . .
Other nations, without establishing an exclusive company, have
confined the whole commerce of their colonies to a particular port of
the mother country, from whence no ship was allowed to sail, but
either in a fleet and at a particular season, or, if single, in consequence
of a particular licence, which in most cases was very well paid for. . . .
Other nations leave the trade of their colonies free to all their
subjects, who may carry it on from all the different ports of the
mother country, and who have occasion for no other licence than the
common dispatches of the customhouse. . . . Under so liberal a
policy the colonies are enabled both to sell their own produce and to
buy the goods of Europe at a reasonable price. But since the disso-
lution of the Plymouth company, when our colonies were but in their
infancy, this has always been the policy of England. It has generally
too been that of France, and has been uniformly so since the dissolu-
tion of what, in England, is commonly called their Mississippi com-
pany. The profits of the trade, therefore, which France and England
cany on with their colonies, though no doubt somewhat higher than
if the competition was free to all other nations, are, however, by no
ENGLISH COLONIAL THEORY AND POLICY 125
means exorbitant; and the price of European goods accordingly is
not extravagantly high in the greater part of the colonies of either of
those nations.
In the exportation of their own surplus produce too, it is only
with regard to certain commodities that the colonies of Great Britain
are confined to the market of the mother country. These commodi-
ties having been enumerated in the act of navigation and in some
other subsequent acts, have upon that account been called enumerated
commodities} The rest are called non-enumerated; and may be
exported directly to other countries, provided it is in British or
Plantation ships, of which the owners and three-fourths of the mariners
are British subjects.
Among the non-enumerated commodities are some of the most
important productions of America and the West Indies; grain of all
sorts, lumber, salt provisions, fish, sugar, and rum. . . .
The enumerated commodities are of two sorts: first, such as are
either the peculiar produce of America, or as cannot be produced, or
at least are not produced, in the mother country. Of this kind are,
melasses, coffee, cacaonuts, tobacco, pimento, ginger, whale-fins, raw
silk, cotton-wool, beaver, and other peltry of America, indigo, fustic,
and other dying woods: secondly, such as are not the peculiar prod-
uce of America, but which are and may be produced in the mother
country, though not in such quantities as to supply the greater part
of her demand, which is principally supplied from foreign countries.
Of this kind are all naval stores, masts, yards, and bowsprits, tar,
pitch, and turpentine, pig and bar iron, copper ore, hides and skins,
pot and pearl ashes. The largest importation of commodities of the
first kind could not discourage the growth or interfere with the sale
of any part of the produce of the mother country. By confining them
to the home market, our merchants, it was expected, would not only
be enabled to buy them cheaper in the Plantations, and consequently
to sell them with a better profit at home, but to establish between
the Plantations and foreign countries an advantageous carrying trade,
of which Great Britain was necessarily to be the center or emporium,
as the European country into which those commodities were first
to be imported. The importation of commodities of the second kind
might be so managed too, it was supposed, as to interfere, not with
the sale of those of the same kind which were produced at home, but
^ The commodities originally enumerated in 12 Car. II, c. 18, § 18, were
sugar, tobacco, cotton-wool, indigo, ginger, fustic, and other dyeing woods.
126/ READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
with that of those which were imported from foreign countries;
because, by means of proper duties, they might be rendered always
somewhat dearer than the former, and yet a good deal cheaper than
the latter. By confining such commodities to the home market,
therefore, it was proposed to discourage the produce, not of Great
Britain, but of some foreign countries with which the balance of
trade was believed to be unfavourable to Great Britain.
The prohibition of exporting from the colonies, to any other coun-
try but Great Britain, masts, yards and bowsprits, tar, pitch, and
turf>entine, naturally tended to lower the price of timber in the colo-
nies, and consequently to increase the expence of clearing their
lands, the principal obstacle to their improvement. But about the
beginning of the present century, in 1703, the pitch and tar company
of Sweden endeavoured to raise the price of their commodities to
Great Britain, by prohibiting their exportation, except in their own
ships, at their own price, and in such quantities as they thought
proper. In order to counteract this notable piece of mercantile policy,
and to render herself as much as possible independent, not only of
Sweden, but of all the other northern powers, Great Britain gave a
bounty upon the importation of naval stores from America and the
effect of this bounty was to raise the price of timber in America,
much more than the confinement to the home market could lower it ;
and as both regulations were enacted at the same time, their joint
effect was rather to encourage than to discourage the clearing of
land in America. . . .
The liberality of England, however, towards the trade of her
colonies has been confined chiefly to what concerns the market for
their produce, either in its rude state, or in what may be called the
very first stage of manufacture. The more advanced or more refined
manufactures even of the colony produce, the merchants and manu-
facturers of Great Britain chuse to reserve to themselves, and have
prevailed upon the legislature to prevent their establishment in the
colonies, sometimes by high duties, and sometimes by absolute
prohibitions. . . .
While Great Britain encourages in America the manufactures of
pig and bar iron, by exempting them from duties to which the like
commodities are subject when imported from any other country, slu
imposes an absolute prohibition upon the erection of steel furnace s
and slit-mills in any of her American plantations.' She will not sulTi i
» [23 Cm-, ti . .,;.]
ENGLISH COLONIAL THEORY AND POLICY 127
her colonists to work in those more refined manufactures even for
their own consumption; but insists upon their purchasing of her
merchants and manufacturers all goods of this kind which they have
occasion for.
She prohibits the exportation from one province to another by
water, and even the carriage by land upon horseback or in a cart,
of hats, of wools and woollen goods,^ of the produce of America; a
regulation which effectually prevents the establishment of any manu-
facture of such commodities for distant sale, and confines the industry
of her colonists in this way to such coarse and household manu-
factures, as a private family commonly makes for its own use, or for
that of some of its neighbours in the same province.
To prohibit a great people, however, from making all that they
can of every part of their own produce, or from employing their
stock and industry in the way that they judge most advantageous
to themselves, is a manifest violation of the most sacred rights of
mankind. Unjust, however, as such prohibitions may be, they have
not hitherto been very hurtful to the colonies. Land is still so cheap,
and, consequently, labour so dear among them , that they can import
from the mother country, almost all the more refined or more advanced
manufactures cheaper than they could make them for themselves.
Though they had not, therefore, been prohibited from establishing
such manufactures, yet in their present state of improvement, a
regard to their own interest would, probably, have prevented them
from doing so. In their present state of improvement, those prohibi-
tions, perhaps, without cramping their industry, or restraining it
from any employment to which it would have gone of its own accord,
are only impertinent badges of slavery imposed upon them, without
any sufficient reason, by the groundless jealousy of the merchants and
manufacturers of the mother country. In a more advanced state
they might be really oppressive and insupportable.
Great Britain too, as she confines to her own market some of the
most important productions of the colonies, so in compensation she
gives to some of them an advantage in that market; sometimes by
imposing higher duties upon the like productions when imported
from other countries, and sometimes by giving bounties upon their
importation from the colonies. In the first way she gives an advantage
in the home-market to the sugar, tobacco, and iron of her own colonies,
and in the second to their raw silk, to their hemp and flax, to their
1 [Hats under 5 Geo. II, c. 22; wools under 10 and 11 W. Ill, c. 10.]
128, READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
indigo, to their naval-stores, and to their building-timber. This
second way of encouraging the colony produce by bounties upon
importation, is, so far as I have been able to learn, peculiar to Great
Britain. The first is not. Portugal does not content herself with
imposing higher duties upon the importation of tobacco from any
other country, but prohibits it under the severest penalties.
With regard to the importation of goods from Europe, England
has likewise dealt more liberally with her colonies than any other
nation.
Great Britain allows a part, almost always the half, generally a
larger portion, and sometimes the whole of the duty which is paid
upon the importation of foreign goods, to be drawn back upon their
exportation to any foreign country. No independent foreign country,
it was easy to foresee, would receive them if they came to it loaded
with the heavy duties to which almost all foreign goods are subjected
on their importation into Great Britain. Unless, therefore, some
part of those duties was drawn back upon exportation, there was an
end of the carrying trade; a trade so much favoured by the mercantile
system. . . .
Of the greater part of the regulations concerning the colony trade,
the merchants who carry it on, it must be observed, have been the
principal advisers. We must not wonder, therefore, if, in the greater
part of them, their interest has been more considered than either
that of the colonies or that of the mother country. In their exclusive
privilege of supplying the colonies with all the goods which they
wanted from Europe, and of purchasing all such parts of their surplus
produce as could not interfere with any of the trades which they
themselves carried on at home, the interest of the colonies was sacri-
ficed to the interest of those merchants. . . .
But though the policy of Great Britain with regard to the trade
of her colonies has been dictated by the same mercantile spirit as
that of other nations, it has, however, upon the whole, been less illib-
eral and oppressive than that of any of them.
m. Workings of the Colonial Policy in England
A. Balance of Trade Theory, 1630 ^
An important phase of the mercantile system, thouRh by no means the whole of
It, was the insistence \x\)ox\ the desirability of amassing within the country a great
» Bmihnd's Treasure by Porraign Trade. By Thomas Mun (London, 1664).
In Economic Classics. Edited by W. J. Ashley (New York, 1895), 7-8.
ENGLISH COLONIAL THEORY AND POLICY 129
store of the precious metals. Since England had no mines of her own, either at
home or in her colonies, she could hope to obtain this only by exporting more com-
modities than she imported and receiving the difference in gold and silver, that is
by maintaining a so-called favorable balance of trade. This was perhaps first
clearly stated by Thomas Mun, an English merchant and director in the East India
Company. His book was written in 1630, but was not published till thirty years
later.
Although a Kingdom may be enriched by gifts received, or by
purchase taken from some other Nations, yet these are things uncer-
tain and of small consideration when they happen. The ordinary
means therefore to encrease our wealth and treasure is by Forraign
Trade, wherein wee must ever observe this rule; to sell more to
strangers yearly than wee' consume of tTieirs in value. For suppose
that when this Kingdom is plentifully served with the CHoth, Lead,
Tinn, Iron, Fish and other native commodities,^we doe yearly export
the overplus to forraign Countries to the value of twenty two hundred
thousand pounds; by which means we are enabled beyond the Seas
to buy and bring in forraign wares for our use and Consumptions,
to the value of twenty hundred thousand pounds; By this order
duly kept in our trading, we may rest assured that the Kingdom
shall be enriched yearly two hundred thousand pounds, which must
be brought to us in so much Treasure; because that part of our
stock which is not returned to us in wares must necessarily be brought
home in treasure.
B. The Purpose of the Navigation Acts, 1^64 *
The conception of the acts of trade as a series of measures designed to promote
the interests of the British Empire as a whole, in which the colonies were regarded as
parts of a larger whole, is here presented by ex-Governor Pownall. Properly
administered they would create "a grand marine empire."
The laws of trade respecting America, were framed and enacted
for the regulating mere plantations; tracts of foreign country, employed
in raising certain specified and enumerated conimodities, solely for
the use of the trade and manufactures of the mother-country — the
purchase of which the mother-country appropriated to itself. These
laws considered these plantations as a kind of farms, which the
mother country had caused to be worked and cultured for its own use.
But the spirit of commerce, (operating on the nature and situation
of these external dominions, beyond what the mother country or the
^ The Administration of the British Colonies. By Thomas Pownall (London,
1774), I, 251-2.
I30 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
Colonists themselves ever thought of, planned, or even hoped for)
has wrought up these plantations to become objects of trade; has enlarged
and combined the intercourse of the barter and exchange of their
various produce, into a very complex and extensive commercial
interest: The operation of this spirit has, in every source of interest
and power, raised and established the British govermnent on a grand
commercial basis; has by the same power, to the true purposes of
the same interest, extended the British dominions through every
part of the Atlantic Ocean, to the actually forming A GRAND
MARINE EMPIRE; if the administration of our government, will
do their part, by extending the British government to wheresoever
the British dominions do extend.
C. Advantage to England of Colonial Shipping, 1740 *
According to the prevailing mercantilist doctrine the building up of a strong
navy and of a merchant marine was essential to a nation's strength. Consequently
the New England colonies were particularly valuable as they aided England by the
building of ships, the production of naval stores, and the development of the carrying
trade.
I have heard some People exclaim against some of the Northern
Colonies, and look upon them as Rivals to their Mother Country,
and particularly in regard to this Article of Shipping and supplying
Europe with Rice and Corn. This Notion seems to me to be ill
grounded, for if Ships were restrained from being built in those
American Parts, what an immense Quantity of Cash would go out
of this Kingdom, to purchase Ships as well as Materials for Building,
at Norway and other foreign countries, since it is a received Opinion
that there is not Timber enough in England, at a convenient Distance,
to answer the Demands of the British Navigation, without great
Prejudice to his Majesty's Navy. And what a Stagnation would
there be to the Vent of almost all Sorts of British Produce and Manu-
factures, which now go to those American colonies, to build ships, and ■
to carry on the many branches of Trade that arise from our Planta- \
tions, and bring home to Great Britain such vast Quantities of Sugar, |
Tobacco, Shipping, Naval Stores, Rice, Rum, Furs and Train-Oil,
besides Ginger, Cotton, Indigo, Piemento, Cocoa, Coffee, Aloes,
Dying- Wood, and other American Products? And by a Circulation
of Trade a considerable Balance is thereby brought home to the na-
» Mtmokrs and Considtratums concerning the Trade and Revenues of the British
Cohniss im America. By John Ashley (London, 1740), 22-as, pasHm.
ENGLISH COLONIAL THEORY AND POLICY 131,
tional Stock from several Countries of Europe, whereby we received
no small share of the Products of the Mines of Brazil, Peru and
Mexico: The flourishing State of this grand Commerce, and the
Revenues arising therefrom, are in no small degree owing to a low
freight, occasioned chiefly from our building Ships so cheap in our
American Plantations. ...
The Northern Colonies are a great Support to the naval Power of
Great Britain, and assist in great Measure in giving us a Superiority
at Sea over all other Nations in the World: They add largely to
our Trade and Navigation the Nursery of Seamen; the Indulgence
given them by granting a bounty upon the importation of Pitch, Tar
and Turpentine, has answered the intention as they have thereby
brought the Prices of those Commodities from upwards of 50s. per
Barrel, down to los. per Barrel and under; which is attended with
this further Convenience, that it aids them in making Returns for
the immense Quantity of Goods that are exported from Great Britain
to those Colonies, and it also prevents five tunes the Value thereof
from going out of the Kingdom in Cash to Sweden, and other Foreign
Countries. And they also supply the King's Yards with great
Quantities of Masts, Yards and Bowsprits, instead of those of foreign
Growth, and may in Time, with proper Encouragement, do the like
in regard to Hemp and Iron, and even with this further Advantage,
that British Produce and Manufactures will purchase what is of the
Produce of our own Plantations, and Cash chiefly must go to purchase
what is of the Produce of foreign Countries.
D. The Colonies a Source of Raw Materials, 7775 ^
Throughout the seventeenth and the first half of the eighteenth centuries the
colonies were esteemed by England chiefly as sources of raw materials and commodi-
ties not produced at home. As long as this point of view prevailed the West Indies
and the southern colonies in North America were valued more highly than the
northern colonies, since they were in a different climatic zone than England and
thus yielded products which were in demand there. This view finds constant ex-
pression in the pages of American Husbandry, though by the time it was pubUshed
a different theory had begun to control colonial policy.
It may not be improper here to review the staples of these colonies,
the southern ones, and the islands, as they all unite in the circum-
stance of having such valuable staples as render them in every respect
highly valuable to Great Britain, and more so than other settlements
more to the north can prove. The commodities chiefly produced in
^ American Husbandry. By an American (London, 1775), II, 231-4, passim.
132^ READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
all our settlements, from Maryland to Grenada, are such as we cannot
have at home, of which we consume great quantities, which must be
purchased of foreigners, and perhaps of enemies, if we had not colonies
that produced them. ... A late writer from whom however I have
had reason in the preceding pages to differ in certain articles, gives
the following table of the tobacco and southern colonies.
Exports from Exports from
Britain Colonies
Virginia and Maryland [£]865,ooo [£]i, 040,000
North Carolina 18,000 68,350
South Carolina 365,000 395,666
Georgia 49,000 74,2oo
St. Augustine 7,000
Pensacola ^_97'f^°° 63,000
^ 1,401,000 1,641,216
West Indies » 2,702,060
4,343,276
.... These therefore are colonies that it much behoves this
country to give every degree of encouragement to that it is possible
they should receive; for by encouraging them, she in fact encourages
herself. . . .
E. The Colonies as a Market for British Manufactures, 7755
About the middle of the eighteenth century the doctrine began to gain ground
that the colonies were to be esteemed chiefly as markets for English manufactures.
England was already entering upon the industrial development which was shortly
to culminate in the industrial revolution. From this point of view the colonies
most to be esteemed were the northern continental ones, which were growing much
more rapidly in population and consuming power than the West Indies or the
•outhern colonies. This is the point brought out by Clarke. He was a physician
in Boston.
The Advantage accruing to the Mother-Country from the great
Number of Inhabitants in her Northern Colonies, will appear from the
Consideration of the Consumption they will occasion of British
Manufactures, and also of all other European Commodities in general,
which last must be landed and re-shipped in Great-Britain (which
is by the Acts of Trade made the Staple of them for all the English
Colonies) before they can be imported into America.
» AmeHcM TroHiUr. « Political Essays.
• Ohstnatwns on the Late and Present Conduct of the French, with Regard to their
EmeroachmenU upon the British Colonies in North America. By WiUiam Clarke
(B<»toii,i7ss).33-4.
!
ENGLISH COLONIAL THEORY AND POLICY
133
I shall not enter into a Detail of the European Commodities
which are consumed within the Colonies, or a Computation of what
Number of Hands their present Inhabitants may employ in England,
for furnishing them with the British ones : Extracts from the Custom-
house Books of the Goods exported for the Colonies, have shewn them
to be very large at present; what is exported for New-England only
amounting to Four Hundred Thousand Pounds Sterling per Ann.
and the future Vent of them continually increasing in Proportion to
the Growth of its Inhabitants, must of itself in Time become a more
considerable Trade, and of a more beneficial Nature in every Respect
to Great-Britain, than all its Branches of Commerce with foreign
States put together. It is computed that near Half the present
Shipping of Great-Britain is improved in the Commerce carried on
with her Plantations, which Trade alone will in Time employ a much
greater Quantity of Shipping, than all the present Shipping of Great-
Britain. Besides, this Trade will enable her with greater Advantage
to extend her Commerce with other Countries.
F. Trade between England and H er N orth American Colonies, iyoo-i'/8o ^
Though compiled to show something else the following table illustrates the rea-
son for the changed attitude of England toward the colonies as stated in the two
previous selections. It will be noticed that down to 1740 England had imported
more from the colonies every decade than she had exported to them; in other
words they were valuable as sources of supplies which England desired. On the
other hand in every decade after 1 740 theexports to the colonies exceed the imports
from them, and in a rapidly increasing proportion; in other words the colonies
are becoming increasingly valuable as markets for British manufactures.
Imports from
that part of America now
UNITED STATES
Exports to
Average
£
s.
d.
£
s.
d.
from 1 700 to
1710
265783
0
10
267205
3
4
1710 ''
1720
392653
17
i^
365645
7
III
" 1720 "
1730
518830
16
6
471342
12
loi
1730 "
1740
670128
16
o\
660136
II
li
!! 1740 "
1750
708943
9
6i
812647
13
o\
]' 1750 "
1760
802691
6
10
1577419
16
2h
" 1760 "
1770
104459 I
17
0
1763409
10
3
1770 "
1780
743560
10
10
1331206
I
5
^ Observations on the Commerce of the American States.
(2d edition, London, 1784), Appendix, 24.
By Lord John Sheffield
134 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
IV. VVuKiviAoi. Ui- illK CoLOxMAL POLICY IN THE COLONIES
A. Arguments for and against the Molasses Act, lyp ^
In order to protett the sugar planters in the British West Indies, it was pro-
p>osed in Parliament in 1731 to prohibit the importation of sugar, rum, or molasses
into England or her American colonies from the French, Dutch, or Spanish West
Indies. As these articles could be had more cheaply in the foreign islands than in
the British ones, a very lucrative trade had sprung up between these islands and the
British American colonies, which was of great benefit to both parties. The argu-
ments that preceded the passage of the so-called Molasses Act, which in 1733
placed heavy duties upon this trade, are here briefly given.
The merchants trading to the British sugar colonies and the
planters, having petitioned the House of Commons, "complaining
against the British Continent American Colonies, for their carrying
on a trade with the foreign sugar colonies of the French and Dutch,
from whence they were supplied with sugar, rum, melasses, &c. in-
stead of those of our own sugar colonies, as well as with foreign
European goods and manufactures; contrary to the tenor or inten^
tion of the laws in being, and of the treaty with France, in the year
1686;" (of which see our abstract under that year) ''And they al-
leged, that as this new method of trade" (first begun to be com-
plained of in the year 1715) "increased, and enriched the colonies of
other nations, so that it was injurious to the trade of this kingdom,
and greatly impoverished the British sugar colonies; and therefore
praying relief therein." Whereupon a committee was appointed,
upon whose report a bill was brought in, and passed the House of
Commons, " For the better securing and encouraging the Trade of his
Majesty's Sugar Colonies.". . .
Section I, "No sugar, rum, or melasses, of the plantations of
foreign nations, shall be imported into Britain or Ireland, or to any
of the King's dominions in America, under forfeiture of lading, ship
and furniture." . . .
Let us next, as briefly as possible, hear the allegations on both
sides for and against this bill. In support of the bill, it was urged,
both within doors and in several pamphlets and newspapers, "That
the supplying the French and Dutch sugar colonies, with shipping,
often sold to them, as also provisions, horses, and lumber, from our
continent colonies, had been practiced ever since the peace of Utrecht;
and that the so doing, not only made those necessary commodities
• An ilistoriati and Chronological Deduction of the Origin of Commerce. By
Adam Andenon (London, 1787), III, 177-^3.
ENGLISH COLONIAL THEORY AND POLICY 135
cheaper to them than they could have them any where else, but it
also obliged the importers to take in payment great quantities of the
said French and Dutch sugars, rum, and melasses, to the infinite
detriment of the British sugar colonies: and, what is still more grievous
and detrimental to the public, that intercourse affords our Northern
continental colonies an opportunity of being supplied with French
European merchandize, although prohibited by law. . . .
"4. That for the encouragement of the said continental colonies
to persist in the said trade, they have the rum and melasses from those
foreign colonies without the high duties paid for them when imported
into Britain ; — that melasses was formerly of little or no value to
the French planter, because rum was detrimental to France, as inter-
fering with the consumption of their brandy, until the French found
they could sell it to our continental people, in return for timber, horses,
oxen, and provisions, so needful for them; whereby also they saved
so much money in specie; — and that even the money which they
receive at our own sugar islands, in payment for their lumber, pro-
visions, horses, &c. is now carried to the French sugar islands for the
purchase of their melasses and rum. Near one-half of the goods
which our continental people now carry to our own sugar islands, be-
ing paid for in money, and not by barter, as formerly; whereby the
French are enabled to increase their settlements, and also their negro
trade. . . .
On the other hand.
It was insisted, in behalf of the British northern cohtinent colonies
of America, viz. New England, Rhode Island, New York, Pennsyl-
vania, and the Jerseys,
" I. That as all the sugar, rum, and melasses of our sugar isles are
taken off at high prices by Great Britain and our said northern colo-
nies; it would be very impolitic to obstruct the latter from taking
melasses, and even rum, from the French islands, for the supply of
their Indian trade, and much more of their fisheries : as our own sugar
colonies are unable to supply the immense quantities of melasses
which those two trades demand; more especially as from the French
islands they receive in payment silver and cocoa, as well as melasses,
(but seldom sugar or rum) which silver comes ultimately to Great
Britain to pay for the balance of trade: and the said northern colo-
nies distil the melasses into rum, for the above-named purposes.
"II. That by this trade the northern colonics are enabled to make
such considerable remittances to England, in ready money," as they
could procure no where else but by their traffic with the foreign colo-
^
136 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
nies, as well as by indigo, cocoa, sugar, and rum, both from British
and foreign colonies, for enabling them to pay for the great quantities
of our manufactures which they yearly take of us. . . .
**VI. That the consumption of rum in New England is so great,
that an author on this subject asserts, that there had been twenty
thousand hogsheads of French melasses manufactured into Rum,
at Boston, in one year: and as a gallon of melasses will make a gallon
of rum, this will amount to one million two hundred and sixty thou-
sand gallons of rum in one year: so vast is the demand for that liquor,
by their fishery, and by the Indian trade. If then, the trade from
New England to the French islands was to be prohibited, how much
would our American fishery, and the Indian trade suffer for want of
rum? Seeing that all the rum from our own sugar colonies is now
entirely taken off by Great Britain and her colonies. . . .
. "Lastly, that the prohibiting the continental people from pur-
chasing of the foreign colonies their sugar, rum, and melasses, or even
laying high duties on them, would utterly destroy a commerce of such
great consequence to the northern colonies, as that without it they could
not carry on their fisheries, — their trade for peltry with the Indians,
and their navigation. Neither could they dispose of the product of
their lands and labour, a great part of the profits whereof centers in
Great Britain, in payment of the manufactures, &c. they have from
thence. Upon the whole," say the advocates for the Northern British
colonies, "the secret and real view of the Sugar Islands, is, to gain
the absolute monopoly of sugar and rum, with respect to the subjects
of Great Britain, to themselves; that so they may have it in their
power to exact what prices they shall please from the buyers."
Notwithstanding all which plausible allegations on both sides, in
a matter of great importance to our commercial interests, there was
nothing legally decided until two years later, viz. till the year 1733.
B. Inefectiveness of the Molasses Act, 1^40 ^
As finally passed, the Molasses Act did not prohibit the trade between the for-
eign West Indies and the British American colonies in sugar, rum, and molasses,
but it placed very heavy duties upon their importation. If these duties had been
coUected this trade would have been destroyed, but under the policy of "salutary
Qflglea " that prevailed the law became practically a dead letter until 1 764-
The British Legislature willing to support and encourage his
Majesty's Plantations in America, and particularly the Sugar Islands,
» Me$itoifs and Considerations concerning the Trade and Revenues of the British
Cdoniet U$ A mtrica. By John Ashley (London, 1 740) , 35-40, passim.
ENGLISH COLONIAL THEORY AND POLICY 137,.^
have thought fit to charge all foreign Sugar, Penneles/ Rum, Spirits,
Molasses and Syrups, imported into Great Britain, with certain Duties
which are abundantly higher than the Duties upon the like Species
of British Growth.
By an Act pass'd in the 6th Year of King Geo. XL cap. 13, [1733]
all these Commodities are prohibited from being imported into Ireland,
and a Duty of five Shillings per Hundred is laid on Sugar or Penneles,
nine Pence per Gallon on Rum or Spirits, and six Pence per Gallon
on Molasses and Syrups of the Product of any Plantation in America,
not in the Possession of his Majesty, imported into any of the British
Plantations in America, . . .
NOTWITHSTANDING these good and wholesome Laws for
encouraging the British Sugar Colonies, and discouraging those of
Foreigners, it is well known that they are notoriously evaded, and
great Quantities of foreign Sugar, Rum, and Molasses are clandestinely
imported for a British Consumption, without paying more Duties
than the British Subject, and in some Instances without paying any
Duties at all. . . .
THE high Duty of six Pence per Gallon Sterling on foreign Mo-
lasses imported into the British Colonies, and the small Number of
Officers on the extensive Shores of the Northern Provinces, for want
of a Fund to pay Salaries to proper Officers, obstructs the Intention of
that Part of the said Act, passed in the 6th Year of the Reign of King
George II [1733], for the better securing and encouraging the Trade
of his Majesty's Sugar Colonies in America, since there is as much
foreign Molasses imported into those Northern Colonies as there was
before the passing of that Act, which cannot amount to less than
10,000 Hogsheads, or 1,000,000 of Gallons per Annum, and little or
no Duties have been paid by virtue of that Act, notwithstanding the
several Precautions before mentioned. And considerable Quantities
of foreign Sugar and Rum are also frequently imported into those
Northern Provinces without paying any Duties at ail.
C. Smuggling in the Colonies, 7757 ^
It was inevitable that efforts should be made by the colonists to evade the
navigation acts when these interfered with a profitable branch of trade, and as a
^ A coarse sort of sugar made from molasses.
2 Report of Sir Charles Hardy to the Lords of Trade (1757). In Documents
relating to the Colonial History of New York. Edited by E. B. O'Callaghan
(Albany, 1856), VII, 271.
13^, READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
matter cf fact a great deal of illegal trade was carried on down to the very time of
the Revolution. The following letter from Sir Charles Hardy, former governor
of New York, to the Lords of Trade, shows something of the extent of this trade.
Halifax, lo*^ July 1757
My Lords,
... As I have now taken leave of the Province of New York as
Governor ... I trust I shall stand excused to you in offering my
thoughts upon two Subjects: in the first the mother country is greatly
Interested with regard to its trade with the Colonys which I have
used all my endeavours to restrain and put upon a proper footing, and
th6 I have not been able to do it so effectually as I coidd wish, yet I
flatter myself some good has attended it, and I am sure greater will
follow by your Lordships' Interposition with the Treasury and Custom
House Boards: I mean the introducing tea, canvas. Gunpowder and
arms for the Indians and many other Articles from Holland that render
to His Majesty no Dutys in Europe, and almost totally discourage the
Importation of these commoditys from Brittain. When I first arrived
at New York I found this iniquitous trade in a very flourishing state,
and upon inquiry was informed that it had been a common practice
for Vessels to come from Holland, stop at Sandy Hook, and smuggle
their Cargoes to New York and c^-rry their Vessels up empty; this
I was determined to put an end to, when this Trade took another cotirse
by sending their Vessells to the Ports of Connecticutt, from whence
it is not very difficult to introduce their goods thro the sound to New
York, and even to Philadelphia; I acquainted Governor Fitch with
some informations I had obtained of this practice, and requested him
to direct the Custom House Officers of his Colony to do their duty,
assuring him I would direct the King's Officers in my Province to
seize any goods they could find Any Body attempting to introduce
into my Government; I believe some small seizures was made in
Connecticutt upon it, but much more in the Province of New York.
Another method the Imj^orters take is to stop at some of the Out
ports of Britain (in their outward bound passage from Holland) and
make a report and enter only half of their cargo, by which the King
is defrauded of his Duty on the other half; In short My Lords, if
some effectual means are not used, the greatest part of the commerce
of the American Colonies will be withdrawn from the Mother Country,
and be carryed to Holland.
139
ENGLISH COLONIAL THEORY AND POLICY
D. An Act to Prevent Iron Manufactures in the Colonies, ^7^9^
The determination to crush out manufactures in the colonies in order to reserve
them as a market for EngHsh goods showed itself early in the colonial policy, as
shown in the proposed legislation of 1719. The project was revived again about
twenty years later, but not until 1750 did the agitation result in legislative action.
In this year an act was passed allowing the free importation into England of colonial
pig-iron, and of bar-iron at the port of London, but prohibiting iron manufactures
in the colonies. By this time the colonies were sufficiently developed to undertake
simple manufactures, and this act caused irritation against the colonial policy of
England.
In this same year 1719, a bill was brought into Parliament, For
rendering the laws concerning the importation of naval stores from
the British American plantations more extensive, by extending it to
all sorts of timber from thence. . . . But the people of the northern
colonies were so surprised and disappointed, on account of certain
clauses put into that bill, that, rather than they should stand part of
it, they were very glad to have it dropped altogether. Such, for
instance, as
"That none in the plantations should manufacture iron wares
of any kind whatever, out of any sows, pigs, or bars whatsoever;
under certain penalties:" — By which clause, says an ingenious
author, on this occasion, in behalf of the colonies, no smith in the
plantations might make so much as a bolt, spike, or nail; whereby
the colonies must have been brought into a miserable condition; the
smith being, above all other trades, absolutely necessary in all other
employments there. Amongst the rest, that of ship-building would
have hereby been utterly destroyed, although by that article they
make a great part of their returns for the purchase of British manu-
factures.
The House of Peers added another clause, ''That no forge going
by water or other work whatsoever, should be erected in any of the
said plantations, for the making, working, or converting of any sows,
pigs, or cast-iron, into bar or rod-iron, upon pain, &c." — This second
clause, says our said author, must have ruined all the iron- works in
the colonies, to the great loss of their proprietors, and have given
the French a fair handle to tempt them into their settlements which
join to ours.
The chief opposers of the manufacture of iron in our American
plantations, were the proprietors of our iron- works at home: . . .
^ An Historical and Chronological Deduction of the Origin of Commerce. By
Adam Anderson (London, 1789), III, 88.
14© READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
E. Colonies Levy Tarif Duties on British Goods, i^i8 *
The acts died below were disallowed by the English government, but the fact
that they were passed shows a striking disregard for the British acts of trade and a
strong desire on the part of the colonies to regulate their trade in their own way.
There were many similar acts passed by the colonial legislatures of which these are
typicaL
Having received from the Commissioners of your Majestys Cus-
toms the Extract of a Letter to them from Colonel Rhett Surveyor
and Comptroller of the Customs in Carolina, dated in December
last . . . whereby it appears that an act was then passed in that prov-
ince of a pernicious Consequence to the Trade and Navigation of this
Kingdome laying a Duty of lo per Cent, upon all Goods of British
Manufactory, imported into that Province from Great Britaine. . .
Yet, considering the ill consequence of such an Act, . . . Wee most
humbly Offer that your Majesty's Pleasure be Signifyed to the Lords
Proprietors of Carolina, that they immediately send over to that
province their Disallowance of the Same, with directions to their
Governor there, never to Give His Assent to any Law of the like
Nature, for the future.
Wee humbly take leave to represent to your Majesty. — That
by the Act of Trade 15° Caroli 2di. [1663] No Goods of the Growth
or Manufacture of Europe can be imported into any of the plantations
but from Great Britain, excepting Salt for the Fisherys, Wines of
the Madera and Western Islands, Servants Horses and Provisions
from Ireland, and also except Irish Linnen from Ireland by the Act,
the 3** and 4° Annae; Whereas this Act of the Massachusetts Bay, not
only Allows the importation of All Sorts of Wines and Commoditys
directly from the place of their Growth, but charges the said Commod-
itys with a double duty, if Imported from this Kingdom, from whence
only they can legally be imported, except in the cases above-men-
tioned, besides that there are no Words to Restrain the Importation
of such Goods into that Plantation to Such Ships only as by Law may
trade thither: — This Act likewise lays a duty of one per Cent, on
all English Merchandizes when at the same time it lays not half that
duty on any other Goods, and Merchandize, and as a farther dis-
couragement to the British Trade and Navigation, lays a Duty of
Tonnage on all Shipping except that of the Massachusetts Bay, and
of some few of its neighbouring Colonies: . . .
» Ads of the Prhy Council, Colonial Scries, (London, 1908) II, 740, selection
i>94; 7S9.idection 1315.
i
ENGLISH COLONIAL THEORY AND POLICY 141
F. Tobacco Growing Suppressed in England, i6ig-i6yo ^
While most attention has been given to restrictions imposed upon colonial
development by the acts of trade, it must be remembered that along with the policy
of restriction there went also the policy of encouragement. Perhaps no more strik-
ing illustration of this can be given than the legislation relative to the growing of
tobacco in England. In order to encourage its production in the colonies, and also
to render the administration of the customs duties easier, its growth was rigidly
suppressed in England, until at last it was absolutely stamped' out. " While
colonial tobacco cou^d be exported only to England, at least it was protected
there from EngUsh competition. "
Whitehall, 3 September [1626]: . . .
A warrant directed to Henry Somerscales, gentleman of the County
of Nottingham or to his Deputie. These are to will and comande you
to make your presente and undelayed repaire unto the house or houses
of all such persons within the Countyes of Buckingham Lincolne and
Yorke, or any other County Cittie or Towne within the Realme of
England onely the Citties of London and Westminster or the Suburbs
thereof excepted as you shall either knowe, or be probably informed,
to receive, conceale, kepe, now sell, or have in their custodie anie
Tobacco of the English growth or making, or anie Spanish or foreigne
growth or making, or anie Spanish or foreigne Tobacco, except onely
such as is of the growth of the English Plantations in foreigne parts
[All such tobacco is to be seized and a bond of £100 apiece to be taken
of its possessors to appear before the Board to answer for their high
contempt].
Whitehall, 21 December [1627]: . . .
This day the Boord, in the presence of his Majestic and by his
speciall direction, takeing into their considerations, the english plan-
tations in Virginia, and the Sommer Islands especially, and con-
sideringe that for the present they cannot subsist, but by the vent
of their Tobacco planted there, and from thence transported heather,
haue thought fitt and soe resolued and ordered: That for the preserva-
tion and incouragement of those English plantations abroad, no
Tobacco shalbe planted either in England, or Ireland, or any the
Islands thereto belonginge, nor any such Tobaco shall be brought:
or sold, vttered or vsed, by any but shalbe vtterly destroyed, and
consumed wheresoeuer it shalbe found either simply, or mixt, with
any other Tobacco; . . . and no Spanish Tobacco, or other Tobacco,
^ Acts of the Privy Council, Colonial Series (London, 1908), I, 109-10, 120-1.
142 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
of the growth of any of the King of Spaines Dominions shall be im-
ported into this Realme, other then such as shalbe imported by his
Majesties Agents only, and only for his Majesties vse. . . .
G. Bounties on Colonial Products, 1^64 ^
While regulating the trade and suppressing the manufactures of the colonies,
the English government encouraged by a system of bounties the production of cer-
tain articles that were desired in England. The production of indigo, hemp, flax,
timber, naval stores, and similar commodities were stimulated in this manner.
As an illustration the bounty granted on hemp is here described.
In order to obtain a cheaper and surer supply of hemp and flax,
and to encourage the production of it in the American colonies, the
{parliament granted a bounty of £8 on every tun of clean merchantable
hemp, or rough flax, imported from the British American colonies
from 24th June 1764 to 24th June 1 771, and thence to 24th June 1778 a
bounty of £6, and thereafter to 24th June 1785 of £4; the pre-emption
of all such hemp and flax being offered to the commissioners of the
navy, and twenty days being allowed for their determination before
the importer could be at liberty to sell it to a private buyer.
' Annals of Commerce, Manufactures, Fisheries, afid Navigation. By Da\id
Maq>henon (London, 1805), III, 400. ^
1^^
CHAPTER V
ECONOMIC CAUSES AND CONDUCT OF THE
REVOLUTION, 1764-1783
I. Economic Causes of the Revolution
A. Fear of French Kept Colonies Loyal, 1748 ^
An extraordinarily accurate prophecy of the future course of events was made
by Kalm as early as 1 748, in which he foretold the independence of the colonies in
from "thirty or fifty years" (i.e. 1 778-1 798), if the fear of French attack were
removed.
It is however of great advantage to the crown of England that the
North American colonies are near a country under the government of
the French, like Canada. There is reason to believe that the King
never was earnest in his attempts to expel the French from their pos-
sessions there; though it might have been done with little difficulty:
for the English colonies in this part of the world have increased so
much in their number of inhabitants, and in their riches, that they
almost vie with Old England. Now in order to keep up the authority
and trade of their mother country, and to answer several other pur-
poses, they are forbid to establish new manufactures, which would
turn to the disadvantage of the British commerce: they are not
allowed to dig for any gold or silver, unless they send them to England
immediately; they have not the liberty of trading to any parts that
do not belong to the British dominions, excepting some settled places;
and foreign traders are not allowed to send their ships to them. These
and some other restrictions, occasion the inhabitants of the English
colonies to grow less tender for their mother country. This coldness
is kept up by the many foreigners, such as Germans, Dutch, and
French, settled here, and living among the English, who commonly
h^ no partiulp^ attachment to Old England; add to this likewise,
tRat many people can never be contented with their possessions,
though they be ever so great, and will always be desirous of getting
^ Travels into North America. By Peter Kalm (London, 1770). In Pinkerton,
Voyages and Travels, XIII, 461.
144 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
more, and of enjoying the pleasure which arises from changing; and
their over great liberty, and their luxury, often lead them to licentious-
ness.
I have been told by Englishmen, and not only by such as were
bom in America, but even by such as came from Europe, that the
English colonies in North America, in the space of thirty or fifty years,
would be able to form a state by themselves, entirely independent on
Old England: but as the whole country which lies along the sea-shore
is unguarded, and on the land side is harrassed by the French in times
of war, these dangerous neighbours are sufl5cient to prevent the con-
nection of the colonies with their mother country from being quite
broken off. The English government has therefore sufficient reason
to consider the French in North America as the best means of keeping
the colonies in their due submission.
B. Prohibition of Western Expansion, 176^1772 ^
One of the little emphasized but important causes of discontent among the
colooists was the prohibition of westward expansion and of settlements beyond the
Alleghany mountains. This was particularly irritating to the people of Virginia
with their large charter clauns to western lands. The Royal Proclamation of 1763,
by the British government, forbade any governor " to grant warrant of survey, or
pass patents for any lands beyond the heads or sources of any of the rivers which
Call into the .\tlantic Ocean from the west or north-west; or upon any lands what-
ever, which not having been ceded to, or purchased by us . . . are reserved to
the said Indians, or any of them." This restriction of the area of settlement to the
•eaooast gave rise to protest on the part of the colonists and the matter was con-
adered leverai times by the Board of Trade, but they each time endorsed the policy
laid down in 1763. The following extract from a report made in 1772 sets forth
the arguments for and against such a policy.
The object of colonisation in North America has been to improve
and extend the commerce, navigation and manufactures of this king-
dom, — (i) by the fisheries on the northern coast; (2) by the growth
of naval stores and raw produce to be exchanged for manufactures and
other merchandise; (3) by securing a supply of lumber and provisions
for the island colonies. For these purposes, settlements were confined
as much as possible to the seacoast, so as to be accessible to merchant
ships and defensible by the British Navy, which could use the ports
as stations in time of war. . . .
The arguments in favour of inland settlements are, (i) Such
oolonies promote population and form a market for English woollens;
» AcU of Ike Prwy Council, Colonial Scries, The Unbound Papers (London,
191 1 ), VI, 513-B, passim.
CAUSES AND CONDUCT OF THE REVOLUTION 145
(2) they secure the fur trade from the French and Spaniards; (3) they
defend the old colonies against the Indians; (4) they lessen the expense
of supplying the distant forts with provisions; (5) the people already
residing there require some form of civil government.
(i) The new sea-coast colonies provide a market for manufac-
tures; but these, being 1,500 miles inland, would supply no returns
to pay for British manufactures, and would probably be led to
manufacture for themselves, "which experience shows has con-
stantly attended in a greater or lesser degree every inland settlement,"
(2) "It does appear to us that the extension of the fur trade
depends entirely upon the Indians being undisturbed in the possession
of their hunting-grounds; that all colonising does in its nature, and
must in its consequences, operate to the prejudice of that branch of
commerce, and that the French and Spaniards would be left in
possession of a great part of what remained; as New Orleans would
still continue the best and surest market."
(3) "So far from affording protection to the old colonies, they
will stand most in need of it themselves."
(4) The degree of utility of the provisions raised will be propor-
tioned to the number of the forts; the French inhabitants near
the Lakes, and on the Mississippi, Illinois and Ohio could supply
all the forts that will be required.
(5) Settlements formed under military establishments require no
other superintendence than that of the military officers in command.
The B. of T. next quote the opinion of the Commander in Chief in
America in a letter to Lord Hillsborough: he conceived such settle-
ments inconsistent with sound policy. The only commodities these
parts could have to barter for manufactures would be furs and skins,
which will naturally decrease as the country increases in people.
Necessity would force them to manufacture for themselves, "and
when all connection upheld by commerce with the mother country
shall cease, it may be expected that an independency on her govern-
ment will soon follow . . . there is room enough for the colonists to
spread within our present limits for a century to come. If we re-
flect how the people of themselves have gradually retired from the
coast, we shall be convinced they want no encouragement to desert
the seacoasts and go into the back-countries, where the lands are
better and got upon easier terms. They are already almost out of
the reach of law and government. . . . The lower provinces are
still thinly inhabited, and not brought to the point of perfection that
has been aimed at for the mutual benefit of Great Britain and them-
146 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
selves. Although America may supply the mother country with
many articles, few of them are yet supplied in quantities equal to her
consumption; the quantity of iron transported is not great, of hemp
very small; and there are many other commodities not necessary
to enumerate, which America has not yet been able to raise, not-
withstanding the encouragement given her by bounties and premiums.
The laying open new tracts of fertile territory in moderate climates
might lessen her present produce, for it is the passion of every man to
be a landholder, and the people have a natural disposition to rove in
search of good lands, however distant. It may be a question likewise
whether colonisations of the kind could be effected without an Indian
war and fighting for every inch of the ground. ... I conceive that
to procure all the commerce that it will afford, and at as little expense
to ourselves as we can, is the only object we should have in view in
the interior country for a century to come." The Indians desire our
manufactures as much as we do their peltry; firearms are necessary
to them for hunting, as they are disused to the bow; for their own
sakes, therefore, they would protect the trade. . . .
The B. of T. propose that no grant be made, and that another
proclamation be issued against any settlement beyond the line
prescribed by the Proclamation of 1763.
C. The Prohibition of Colonial Paper Money ^ 1^64 ^
The issue of paper money in the colonies had always been regarded with dis-
approval by the British government, and a series of measures was passed designed
to put an end to such practices. In 1741 Parliament declared its authority
over the matter; ten years later it forbade the issue of colonial bills of credit in
New England; and finally in 1764 it extended this prohibition to all the colonies.
The quarrels over this matter between colonial legislatures and royal governors
was undoubtedly an important factor in creating discontent in the colonies.
In the Report of the Board of Trade, dated February 9th, 1764,
the following reasons are given for restraining the emission of paper
bills of credit in America, as a legal tender.
1. "That it carries the gold and silver out of the province, and so
ruins the country; as experience has shown^ in every colony where it
has been practiced in any great degree.
2. "That the merchants trading to America have suffered and lost
by it.
3. "That the restriction has had a beneficial ejject in New England.
» Report of the Board of Trade, February q, 1764. Quoted in Franklin's Works
(Sptrk'tedUioo, Boston, 1840), II, 341-2.
CAUSES AND CONDUCT OF THE REVOLUTION 147
4. "That every medium of trade should have an intrinsic value ^
which paper money has not. Gold and silver are therefore the fittest
for this medium, as they are an equivalent, which paper never can
be.
5. "That debtors J in the Assemblies, make paper money with
fraudulent views.
6. "That in the middle colonies, where the credit of the paper
money has been best supported, the bills have never kept to their nominal
value in circulation, but have constantly depreciated to a certain
degree, whenever the quantity has been increased."
D. Remonstrance of New York Assembly against
Prohibition of Paper Money, lyy^ ^
The significance of the act of Parliament which prohibited the issue of legal
tender paper money in the colonies as one of the important causes of the Revolution
is now recognized. Its inclusion in a list of grievances by the New York Assembly
shows the attitude of the colonists on this point.
"The Representation and Remonstrance of the General As-
sembly of the Colony of New York. . . .
"We cannot avoid mentioning among our grievances the Act
for prohibiting the legislature of this colony from passing any law
for the emission of a paper currency to be a legal tender in the colony:
our commerce affords so small a return of specie, that without a paper
currency, supported on the credit of the colony, our trade and the
change of the property must necessarily decrease; without this expedi-
ent we never should have been able to comply with the requisitions
of the crown during the last war, or to grant ready aids on any sudden
emergencies. The credit of our bills has ever been secured from de-
preciation by the short periods limited for their duration, and sink-
ing them by taxes raised on the people; and the want of this power
may, in future, prevent his Majesty's faithful subjects here from
testifying their loyalty and affection to our gracious sovereign, and
from granting such aids as may be necessary for the general weal and
safety of the British empire: nor can we avoid remonstrating against
this Act, as an abridgement of the royal prerogative, and a violation
of our legislative rights. . . .
"Assembly Chamber, City of New York, the 25th day of March
1775."
^ The Parliamentary History of Englafid. By Hansard (London, 1813),
XVHI, 653.
148 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
E. The Enforcement of the Navigation ActSy 1764 ^
The Seven Years* War in America had resulted in the expulsion of the French,
which was an advantage to the colonies, but had left Great Britain with a largely
increased debt. It was determined therefore to establish a standing army in the
colonies, to the supp>ort of which the colonists must contribute by means of a new
system of taxes. At the same time the navigation acts were to be vigorously en-
forced with the aid of British ships of war, paper money prohibited, and the reins
of government drawn more tightly about the colonies. These different acts of the
year 1764 were passed under the leadership of Charles Townshend, who was the first
lord of trade and intrusted with the administration of the colonies. They are
s>Tnpathetically described by an English author.
The entire cession of the French possessions in North America,
was a subject of trembling expectation in the minds of many who
were, by no means, in the habit of employing their reason in idle
sp)eculations. While this vast extent of country remained in the
possession of France, it certainly operated as a powerful restraint
upon the colonies, and by keeping them in perpetual alarms, obliged
them to have continual recourse to the parent state for aid and pro-
tection. The acquisition therefore of Canada, &c. by freeing the
British North American colonies from all apprehensions on that
dangerous quarter, afforded them a security which they had never
known; and, of course, gave leisure for the progress of those ideas,
which otherwise might indeed have occasionally risen into existence,
but would never have attained to any degree of maturity.
While France possessed this ceded territory, she must, in the most
confidential moments of peace, have been considered, from her Ameri-
can ix)sition, exclusive of all other circumstances, as a natural enemy
to British America; and while that idea remained, the connection
between Great Britain and her Colonies must have subsisted. The
one would have wanted protection, and the other would have required
obedience; and these reciprocal obligations would have preserved
their union unbroken in every circumstance of it.
Thus the conclusion of the war between Great Britain and France,
placed the North American colonies in a situation of advantage which
they had never before known, and gave them an unex-perienced oppor-
tunity to exert all that natural vigour which they have since mani-
fested. That they should now begin to feel their consequence, was
a matter of natural expectation; and that the wish to realize it, in
some degree, by enlarging their privileges, or pressing a little on what
• An HiHorkd and Chronological Deduction of the Origin of Commerce. By
AduD Andenoo (London, 1789), IV, 61-5.
CAUSES AND CONDUCT OF THE REVOLUTION 149
might be considered as the exuberance of parental authority, should
be encouraged among them, was the result of their prosperous and
powerful condition. . . .
At this time, therefore, and when all these circumstances were
evident to the most common observation, it was surely the true pol-
icy of Great Britain to have employed the most temperate measures
in her government of the American colonies; and it was at this moment
that she began to exercise her power, though not indeed without con-
sideration; for the minister of that period was not in the habit of
committing rash actions. . . .
The methods which were now adopted to prevent smuggling,
might not have been attended with any unpleasant consequences,
if they had been confined to the coasts of Great Britain and Ireland;
but by extending them to the shores of America, they interrupted
a commerce, which though not strictly legal, was extremely advan-
tageous to the colonies. They were therefore in a state of no common
discontent on account of the acts of the British Parliament which
added to their restraints, when the stamp act appeared to heighten
their resentment, and raise a kind of private displeasure into public
remonstrance and general opposition.
A number of armed cutters were stationed around the coasts of
Great Britain, and the most rigid orders were issued to the com-
manders of them to act in the capacity of revenue oflScers. They
were enjoined to take the usual custom-house oaths, and to observe
the regulations prescribed by them. Thus was the distinguished
character of a British naval officer degraded by the employments of
a tide-waiter, and that active, zealous courage which had been accus-
tomed to the conquest of an enemy, was now to be exerted in opposing
a contraband trade, and to find a reward in the seizure of prohibited
commodities.
The clamour against these measures was loud in England; but
in America the discontent on the occasion was little short of outrage.
As naval gentlemen, the commanders of these vessels were not con-
versant in the duties of revenue collection, they were therefore often-
times guilty of oppression; remedies were indeed at hand in England;
but as the Lords of the Admiralty or the Treasury could alone rectify
any errors, check any violence, punish any injustice, or restore any
violated property, it was always extremely difficult, and in many cases
almost impracticable, for the Americans to obtain redress.
But bad as this evil was, there arose one, from the same source,
which was still worse. — A trade had been carried on for more than
ISO READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
a century between the British and Spanish colonies in the new world,
to the great advantage of both, but especially the former, as well as
of the mother country; the chief materials of it being on the side of
the British colonies, British manufactures, or such of their own prod-
uce as enabled them to purchase British manufactures for their own
consumption; and, on the part of the Spaniards, gold and silver in
bullion and coin, cochineal and medicinal drugs, beside live stock and
mules; which, in the West India plantations, to which places alone
these last articles were carried, from their great utility, justly deserved
to be considered of equal importance with the most precious metals.
This trade did not clash with the spirit of any act of Parliament
made for the regulation of the British plantation trade; or, at least
with that spirit of trade which universally prevails in our commercial
acts: but it was found to vary sufficiently from the letter of the
former, to give the new revenue officers a plea for doing that from
principles of duty, which there were no small temptations to do from
the more powerful motives of interest. Accordingly, they seized,
indiscriminately, all the ships upon that trade, both of subjects and
foreigners; which the custom-house officers stationed on shore, either
through fear of the inhabitants, a more just way of thinking, or an
happy ignorance, had always permitted to pass unnoticed.
As the advantage of this commerce was very much in favour of
Great Britain, the Spanish monarchy had always opposed it: guarda-
costas were commissioned to scour the coasts of her American do-
minions, and to seize every vessel which approached too near them;
a duty which they had exercised with such general licence, as to
provoke the war which broke out in 1739. The British cruizers
seemed to act at this time with the same spirit in destroying this
commerce, so that in a short space of time it was almost wholly
annihilated.
This circumstance was to the northern colonies a depri\ation of
the most serious nature. — This traffic had long proved the mine
from whence they drew those supplies of gold and silver that enabled
them to make copious remittances to England, and to provide a suffi-
ciency of current specie at home. A sudden stop being thus put to
such a source of advantage, the Americans expressed the injury
they sustained in the harshest terms that a sense of injury could in-
spire. But in spite of all complaints, the ministry continued to pro-
ceed in their unfortunate career, and measures equally ofTensive to
the inhabitants of the North American colonies continued to be
successively adopted.
5>
CAUSES AND CONDUCT OF THE REVOLUTION 151
Besides this trade carried on between the British colonies in gen-
eral, especially those in the West Indies, and the Spanish, there had
for a long time subsisted one equally extensive between the British
North American colonies in particular, and those of the French West
Indies, to the great advantage of both, as it consisted chiefly in such
goods as must otherwise have remained upon the hands of the pos-
sessors; so that it united, in the strictest sense, all those benefits
which liberal minds include in the idea of a well regulated commerce,
as tending, in the highest degree, to the mutual welfare of those who
were concerned in it.
In these benefits the respective mother countries had, without
doubt, a very large share, though it may be impossible to determine
which, upon the whole, had the most. We had enough to engage
those in power to think it worth connivance, for it certainly was not
strictly to law, in consideration of the vast quantity of manufactures
it enabled our American colonies to take from us; . . .
Through the suppression of that trade which we have just been
relating, instead of barely interrupting these supplies of the neces-
saries and conveniences of life, which the North American colonies
were before accustomed to receive in return for their superfluities and
incumbrances, tended visibly, by obstructing their internal commerce,
to deprive them, in a great degree, even of those blessings, the sources
of which lay within themselves; yet a law was made in the beginning
of the last year [1764], which, whilst it rendered legal, in some re-
spects, their intercourse with the other European colonies in the new
world, loaded the best part of it with duties so far above its strength
to bear, as to render it contraband to all intents and purposes. Be-
sides, it ordered the money arising from these duties to be paid, and
in specie, into the British Exchequer, to the entire draining of the
little ready money which might be still remaining in the colonies;
and within a fortnight after, another law was passed to hinder the
colonies from supplying the demand of money for their internal wants,
by preventing such paper bills of credit as might be afterwards in
them, from being made legal tender in payment; and the legal tender
of such bills as were actually subsisting, from being prolonged beyond
the periods already limited for calling in and sinking the same.
These new regulations following each other so rapidly, produced
an equal degree of surprise and discontent among the people of North
America. Warm and spirited remonstrances were sent to England
on the occasion.
is2 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
F. The Sugar Act of 1764^
By the so-called Molasses Act of 1 733 Parliament imposed practically prohibi-
tory duties upon rum, molasses, and sugar imported into the British colonies of
North America from the West India islands that belonged to other nations. The
duties were gd. f)er gallon up)on rum or spirits, 6d. per gallon upon molasses
or syrups, and s s. per hundredweight upon sugar. Had these duties been enforced
they would have destroyed an important and lucrative trade between the northern
oolonies and the French West Indies, from which both molasses and rum could be
had more cheaply than from the British West Indies. But the act was disregarded
and remained practically a dead letter.
In 1764 Parliament decided to enforce the revenue acts and modified the pro-
hibitive duties imf)osed by the Act of 1733, at the same time providing for their
vigorous collection. The so-called Sugar Act of 1764 prohibited the importation
of rum or spirits from foreign plantations, raised the duty upon foreign sugars to
22 s. per hundredweight, but reduced that upon molasses to 3 d. As the former act
had been inop)erative, this was practically equivalent to the imposition of new duties.
Sir Francis Bernard, Governor of Massachusetts, was one of the more Uberal and
farsighted British officials in America and warned his country of the consequences
if the Sugar Act were enforced.
The publication of orders for the strict execution of the Molasses
Act has caused a greater alarm in this country than the taking of
Fort William Henry did in 1757. Petitions from the trading towns
have been presented to the General Court; and a large Committee
of both Houses is sitting every day to prepare instructions for their
Agent. In the mean time, the Merchants say, There is an end of the
trade in this Province; that it is sacrificed to the West Indian Planters;
that it is time for every prudent man to get out of debt with Great
Britain as fast as he can, and betake himself to husbandry, and be
content with such coarse manufactures as this country will produce.
This is now the common talk wherever one goes; and it is certain,
that whatever detriment the contmuation and strict execution of the
Molasses Act will bring to the trade of North Amerim (and surely
more or less it will bring), it will soon come home to Great Britain;
and then the British Merchants will see their imprudence in sitting
still as unconcerned spectators, whilst the West Iridians are confining
the trade of this extensive and improving country within their own
narrow and unextensible circle. For nothing is more plain, than
that if the exports of North America are diminished (be it by one
fourth, one third, or one half), her imports from Great Britain must
be letsened in the same proportion. To apply this to a fact: last
• Sdmi Letters on the Trade aiui Covrrnment of America. By Franci'^ Bmiarcl
(London, 1764), > 1 1
CAUSES AND CONDUCT OF THE REVOLUTION 153
year were imported into this Province 15,000 hogsheads of molasses,
all of which, except less than 500, came from Ports, which are now
Foreign. The value of this, at is. 4d. a gallon (which is a middUng
price as sold out of merchants storehouses) is 100,000 pounds sterhng;
to purchase which, fish and lumber of near the same value must be
sent from hence. Now suppose this trade prohibited (for a duty of
50 per cent, amounts to a prohibition) the consequences must be,
that this Province must import 100,000 pounds less of British goods;
and there is an entire loss of 100,000 pounds (the fish and lumber
coming from an inexhaustible store) worth of goods to the general
British Empire, besides the loss of trade and decrease of shipping;
and this annual, in one Province, and in one article of trade only.
Is there not therefore just cause of alarm from the apprehensions of
the probability or possibility of such consequences? If it should be
proposed to try the experiment for two or three years only; first let it
be considered, that the experiment itself, if it turns out as is expected,
will cost Great Britain many hundred thousand pounds. But this
is not all : if, after the experiment has been made, it should be thought
proper to restore the North Americans to the freedom of this trade,
is it certain that, after an interruption of two or three years, it can be
recovered again? Is it not probable, that in the interim the Foreign
Plantations may be supplied from other parts (viz. low-priced fish
from the French fisheries, lumber from the East side of the Mississippi;)
and when the North Americans have leave again to resort to the For-
eign Ports, they may find them shut against them? When the sale
of French Molasses to the North Americans is prohibited, may it not
be the cause of procuring the French planters liberty to distil it them-
selves? And if this valuable trade, which takes from us what no other
markets will receive, and returns to us what ultimately centers in
Great Britain, should, by making experiments, be destroyed; would
it not be the case of the man whose curiosity (or expectation of ex-
traordinary present gain) killed the goose who laid him the golden
eggs? Surely it is not an idle or groundless fear which makes think-
ing people dread the consequences of continuing and enforcing this
Act.
G. Grievances of the Colonists, 1764 ^
Governor Pownall here sums up the obnoxious acts of the year 1764 of which
the colonists were complaining so loudly. Pownall was one of the most liberal
^ The Administration of the British Colonies. By Thomas Pownall (5th ecJition,
London, 1774), I, 126-129,
154 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
administrators in the colonics, serving as governor of Massachusetts and of South
Carolina, and as lieutenant governor of New Jersey. After his return to England
he wrote and spoke in Parliament in defense of the colonies.
Upon the restoration of the monarchy, when many of the rights
of the subject, and of the constitution, were settled; the constitution
of the colonies^ received their great alteration: the King participated the
sovereignty of the colonies with the parliament; the parliament, in
its proper capacity, was admitted to a share in the government of
them: The parliament then first, taking up the idea, indeed very
naturally, from the power they had exercised during the common-
wealth; that all these, his Majesty's sovereign dominions, and "all
these, his Majesty's subjects," were of or belonging to the realm;
then first, in the proper capacity of legislature, (supreme legislature
of the realm,) interposed in the regulation and governing of the colo-
nies. — And thenceforward, from time to time, sundry acts of parlia-
ment were made, not only (ist) for regulating the trade of the colonies;
but also (2dly) for ordering and limiting their internal rights, privi-
leges and prop>erty; and even (3dly) for taxing them. — In the course
of which events; while the Colonists considered this principle as the
Palladium of their liberties, viz. that they were to be ruled and gov-
erned only by acts of parliament, together with their own laws not
contrary to the laws of England; the King in the same course of events
called in the aid of parliament, to enable him to regulate and govern
the colonies. — The British merchants at times applied to parliament,
on the affairs of the colonies: and even the West India Planters applied
to the same power, to carry a measure against the colonies of North
America. Hence we find enacted, in the course of those events,
I. The navigation act; the sugar, and other acts, for regulating
and restraining the trade of the colonies.
n. Also Acts, I. altering the nature of their estates, by treating
real estates as chattels. 2. Restraining them from manufactures.
3. Regulating their money. 4. Altering the nature of evidence in
the courts of common law; by making an aflfidavit of a debt before
the Lord mayor in London, &c. certified in writing, an evidence in
their courts in America. 5. Dissolving indentures; by discharging
such of their servants as should enlist in the King's service.
III. Also Acts, fixing a tax upon American sailors, payable to the
Greenwich Hospital. 2. Likewise imposing taxes; by the several
duties payable on sundry goods, if intended as materials of trade,
to be paid vntkin the province, or colony, before they can be put on
boarH '^•- '-'v>'tation. 3. Also, the revenue arising from the duties
CAUSES AND CONDUCT OF THE REVOLUTION 155
payable on the postage of letters. 4. Also, the tax of quartering
soldiers, and supplying them in their quarters. Lastly, establishing
the claim which Great Britain makes, of taxing the colonies in all
cases whatsoever, by enacting the claim into a declared right, by act
of parliament.
H. Opposition to Acts of Trade, ijy^ ^
The essays from \yhich this extract was taken were written by John Adams in
answer to one by Leonard, in which the latter had defended the conduct of Great
I^ritain toward the colonies. While some allowance must be made for the purpose
for which the essay was written, it yet contains some very significant statements.
This writer says, acts of parliament for regulating our internal
polity were familiar. This I deny. So far otherwise, that the hatter's
act was never regarded; the act to destroy the Land Bank Scheme
raised a greater ferment in this province, than the stamp-act did,
which was appeased only by passing province laws directly in oppo-
sition to it. The act against slitting mills, and tilt hammers, never
was executed here. As to the postage, it was so useful a regulation,
so few persons paid it, and they found such a benefit by it, that little
opposition was made to it. Yet every man who thought about it
called it an usurpation. Duties for regulating trade we paid, because
we thought it just and necessary that they should regulate the trade
which their power protected. As for duties for a revenue, none were
ever laid by parliament for that purpose until 1764, when, and ever
since, its authority to do it has been constantly denied. Nor is
this complacent writer near the truth, when he says, *' We know that
in all those acts of government, the good of the whole had been con-
sulted." On the contrary, we know that the private interest of pro-
vincial governors and West India planters, had been consulted in
the duties on foreign molasses, &c. and the private interest of a
few Portugal merchants, in obliging us to touch at Falmouth with
fruit, &c. in opposition to the good of the whole, and in many other
instances.
I. Testimony on the Stamp Act, i'j6^ ^
A part of the scheme for colonial taxation had been a stamp act, which was ap-
proved by Parliament with very little opposition, the vote being 205 to 49 in the
^ Novanglus and M assachusetiensis: or Political Essays, published in the years
1774 and J775.By John Adams and Jonathan Sewall [Daniel Leonard] (Boston,
i8i9),39-
"^ Franklin, B., Works (Sparks edition, Boston, 1840), IV, 162-181, passim.
Also in Hansard, Parliamentary History of England, XVI, 137-160.
1S6 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
House of Commons and unanimous in the House of Lords. In the colonies, how-
ever, where the stricter enforcement of the acts of trade were already threatening
commerce with disaster, especially that carried on with the French and Spanish
West Indies, the Stamp Act was vigorously resisted. To secure information as to
the reasons for this attitude and as to general conditions in the colonies Parliament
summoned Benjamin Franklin as a witness. The testimony he gave in this hearing
is marked by tact and firmness and presents the colonial attitude very shrewdly.
It made a deep impression upon Parliament. Some of the questions were evidently
put by sympathizers with the colonies, for they invite answers favorable to their
Q. What is your name, and place of abode?
A, Franklin, of Philadelphia.
Q. Do the Americans pay any considerable taxes among
themselves?
A . Certainly many, and very heavy taxes.
Q. What are the present taxes in Pennsylvania, laid by the laws
of the colony?
A. There are taxes on all estates, real and personal; a poll tax;
a tax on all offices, professions, trades, and businesses, according to
their profits; an excise on all wine, rum, and other spirits; and a
duty, of ten f>ounds f>er head on all negroes imported, with some other
duties.
Q. For what purposes are those taxes laid?
A. For the support of the civil and military establishments of
the country, and to discharge the heavy debt contracted in the last
war.
Q. How long are those taxes to continue?
A. Those for discharging the debt are to continue till 1772, and
longer, if the debt should not be then all discharged. The others
must always continue. . . .
Q. What may be the amount of one year's imports into Penn-
sylvania from Britain?
A . I have been informed that our merchants compute the imports
from Britain to be above five hundred thousand pounds.
Q. What may be the amount of the produce of your province
exported to Britain?
A. It must be small, as we produce little that is wanted in Britain.
I suppose it cannot exceed forty thousand pounds.
Q, How then do you pay the balance?
A . The balance is paid by our produce carried to the West Indies,
and sold in our own islands, or to the French, Spaniards, Danes, and
Dutch; by the same produce carried to other colonies in North
CAUSES AND CONDUCT OF THE REVOLUTION 157
America, as to New England, Nova Scotia, Newfoundland, Carolina,
and Georgia; by the same, carried to different parts of Europe, as
Spain, Portugal, and Italy. In all which places we receive either
money, bills of exchange, or commodities that suit for remittance
to Britain; which, together with all the profits on the industry of our
merchants and mariners, arising in those circuitous voyages, and the
freights made by their ships, center finally in Britain to discharge
the balance, and pay for British manufactures continually used in
the provinces, or sold to foreigners by our traders. . . .
Q. You have said that you pay heavy taxes in Pennsylvania;
what do they amount to in the pound?
A. The tax on all estates, real and personal, is eighteen pence
on the pound, fully rated; and the tax on the profits of trades and
professions, with other taxes, do, I suppose, make full half a
crown in the pound [i.e. a tax of i2|%, which would be very
heavy. — Ed.] . . .
Q. Do you think the people in America would submit to pay the
stamp duty, if it was moderated?
A. No, never, unless compelled by force of arms. . . .
Q. What was the temper of America towards Great Britain
before the year 1763?
A. The best in the world. They submitted willingly to the
government of the crown, and paid, in their courts, obedience to the
acts of Parliament. . . .
Q. And what is their temper now?
A. O, very much altered.
Q. Did you ever hear the authority of Parliament to make laws
for America questioned till lately?
A. The authority of Parliament was allowed to be valid in all
laws, except such as should lay internal taxes. It was never disputed
in laying duties to regulate commerce. . . .
Q. And have they not still the same respect for Parliament?
A. No, it is greatly lessened.
Q. To what cause is that owing?
A. To a concurrence of causes; the restraints lately laid on their
trade, by which the bringing of foreign gold and silver into the colo-
nies was prevented; the prohibition of making paper money among
themselves, and then demanding a new and heavy tax by stamps,
taking away, at the same time, trials by juries, and refusing to receive
and hear their humble petitions.
Q. Don't you think they would submit to the Stamp Act, if it
IS8 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
was modified, the obnoxious parts taken out, and the duty reduced
to some particulars of small moment?
A. No, they will never submit to it. . . .
Q. You say the colonies have always submitted to external taxes,
and object to the right of Parliament only in laying internal taxes;
now can you show, that there is any kind of difference between the
two taxes to the colony on which they may be laid?
A. I think the difference is very great. An external tax is a
duty laid on commodities imported; that duty is added to the first
cost and other charges on the commodity, and, when it is offered to
sale, makes a part of the price. If the people do not like it at that
price, they refuse it; they are not obliged to pay it. But an internal
tax is forced from the people without their consent, if not laid by their
own representatives. The Stamp Act says, we shall have no com-
merce, make no exchange of property with each other, neither pur-
chase, nor grant, nor recover debts; we shall neither marry nor make
our wills, unless we pay such and such sums; and thus it is intended
to extort our money from us, or ruin us by the consequences of
refusing to pay it.
Q. But supposing the external tax or duty to be laid on the neces-
saries of life, imported into your colony, will not that be the same
thing in its effects as an internal tax?
A. I do not know a single article imported into the northern
colonies, but what they can either do with out, or make themselves.
Q. Don't you think cloth from England absolutely necessary
to Uiem?
A. No, by no means absolutely necessary; with industry and
good management, they may very well supply themselves with all
they want.
Q. Will it not take a long time to establish that manufacture
Mnong them; and must they not in the mean while suffer greatly?
A. I think not. They have made a surprising progress already.
And I am of opinion, that before their old clothes are worn out,
they will have new ones of their own making.
Q. Can they possibly find wool enough in North America?
A. They have taken steps to increase the wool. They entered
into general combinations to eat no more lamb; and very few lambs
were killed last year. This course, persisted in, will soon make a
prodigious difference in the quantity of wool. And the establishing
of great manufactories, like those in the clothing towns here, is no|'
necessary, as it is where the business is to be carried on for the pur*
CAUSES AND CONDUCT OF THE REVOLUTION 159
poses of trade. The people will all spin, and work for themselves,
in their own houses. . . .
Q. If the act is not repealed, what do you think will be the conse-
quences?
A . A total loss of the respect and affection the people of America
bear to this country, and of all the commerce that depends on that
respect and affection.
Q. How can the commerce be affected?
A. You will find, that if the act is not repealed, they will take
a very little of your manufactures in a short time.
Q. Is it in their power to do without them?
A . I think they may very well do without them.
Q, Is it their interest not to take them?
A. The goods they take from Britain are either necessaries, mere
conveniences, or superfluities. The first, as cloth, &c., with a little
industry they can make at home; the second they can do without,
till they are able to provide them among themselves; and the last,
which are much the greatest part, they will strike off immediately.
They are mere articles of fashion, purchased and consumed because
the fashion in a respected country; but will now be detested and re-
jected. The people have already struck off, by general agreement, the
use of all goods fashionable in mournings, and many thousand pounds'
worth are sent back as unsalable. . . .
Q. You say they do not object to the right of Parliament, in
laying duties on goods to be paid on their importation; now, is
there any kind of difference between a duty on the importation of
goods, and an excise on their consumption?
A. Yes, a very material one; an excise, for the reasons I have
just mentioned, they think you can have no right to lay within their
country. But the sea is yours; you maintain, by your fleets, the
safety of navigation in it, and keep it clear of pirates; you may have,
therefore, a natural and equitable right to some toll or duty on mer-
chandises carried through that part of your dominions, towards defray-
ing the expense you are at in ships to maintain the safety of that
carriage.
J. Causes of American Discontent before lydS ^
In the following extract Franklin puts his finger upon a weak point in the
colonial system, namely the ease with which interested parties or private interests
could secure favorable legislation directed against the colonies. Acts which might
^ Franklin, B., Works (Sparks edition, Boston, 1840), IV, 249-52.
i6o READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
have been borne without a murmur, if clearly in the interest of the Empire, took
on a very different aspect when they were seen to favor only a few individuals.
There were enough of these to discredit the whole system in the eyes of the colonists.
The colonists thus being greatly alarmed, as I said before, by the
news of the act for abolishing the legislature of New York, and the
imposition of these new duties, professedly for such disagreeable pur-
poses, (accompanied by a new set of revenue officers, with large ap>-
pointments, which gave strong suspicions that more business of the
same kind was soon to be provided for them, that they might earn
their salaries,) began seriously to consider their situation ; and to re-
volve afresh in their minds grievances, which, from their respect and
love for this country, they had long borne, and seemed almost willing
to forget.
They reflected how lightly the interest of all America had been
estimated here, when the interests of a few of the inhabitants of Great
Britain happened to have the smallest competition with it. That the
whole American people was forbidden the advantage of a direct impor-
tation of wine, oil, and fruit, from Portugal, but must take them loaded
with all the expense of a voyage one thousand leagues round about,
being to be landed first in England, to be re-shipped for America;
expenses amounting, in war time at least, to thirty pounds per cent
more than otherwise they would have been charged with; and all
this, merely that a few Portugal merchants in London may gain a
commission on those goods passing through their hands, (Portugal
merchants, by the by, that can complain loudly of the smallest hard-
ships laid on their trade by foreigners, and yet, even in the last year,
could oppose with all their influence the giving ease to their fellow
subjects labouring under so heavy an oppression !) That, on a slight
complaint of a few Virginia merchants, nine colonies had been re-
strained from making paper money, become absolutely necessary to
their internal commerce, from the constant remittance of their gold
and silver to Britain.
But not only the interests of a particular body of merchants, but
the interests of any small body of British tradesmen or artificers,
has been found, they say, to outweigh that of all the King's subjects
in the colonies. There cannot be a stronger natural right than that
of a man's making the best profit he can of the natural produce of .
his lands, provided he does not thereby hurt the state in general.
Iron is to be found everywhere in America, and the beaver furs are
the natural produce of that country. Hats, and nails, and steel are
wanted there as well as here. Tt is of no importance to the common
CAUSES AND CONDUCT OF THE REVOLUTION i6i
welfare of the empire, whether a subject of the King's obtains his
living by making hats on this or that side of the water. Yet the
hatters of England have prevailed to obtain an act in their own favor,
restraining that manufacture in America; in order to oblige the Ameri-
cans to send their beaver to England to be manufactured, and
purchase back the hats, loaded with the charges of a double transpor-
tation. In the same manner have a few nail-makers, and a still smaller
body of steel-makers (perhaps there are not half a dozen of these in
England), prevailed totally to forbid by an act of Parliament the
erecting of slitting-mills, or steel furnaces in America; that the Ameri-
cans may be obliged to take all their nails for their buildings, and
steel for their tools, from these artificers, under the same disadvan-
tages.
Added to these, the Americans remembered the act authorizing
the most cruel insult that perhaps was ever offered by one people to
another, that of emptying our gaols into their settlements; Scotland
too having within these two years obtained the privilege it had not
before, of sending its rogues and villains also to the plantations.
K. Opposition to Tax on Tea due to Smugglers, lyjo ^
John Adams was living in Boston at the time of the destruction of the tea in
Boston harbor and was in intimate touch mth the leading men in the movements
leading to the Revolution. As the extract is taken from his private diary we may-
assume his comment is sincere.
Stephens, the Connecticut hemp man, was at my office, with
Mr. Counsellor Powell and Mr. Kent. Stephens says, that the whole
colony of Connecticut has given more implicit observance to a letter
from the selectmen of Boston than to their Bibles for some years;
and that, in consequence of it, the country is vastly happier than it
was; for every family has become a little manufactory-house, and
they raise and make within themselves many things for which they
used to run in debt to the merchants and traders. So that nobody is
hurt but Boston and the maritime towns.
"I wish there was a tax of five shillings sterling on every button
from England. It would be vastly for the good of this country, &c.
As to all the bustle and bombast about tea, it has been begun by about
half a dozen Holland tea-smugglers, who could not find so much
profit in their trade since the ninepence was taken off in England."
Thus he. Some sense and some nonsense!
1 Diary, in Works. By John Adams. Edited by C. F. Adams (Boston,
1850), II, 237.
1 62 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
L. A Defence of the Navigation Acts, iy6g ^
A vigorous defense of the navigation a cts and of the English colonial policy was
made by Sir George Grenville, the chancellor of the exchequer during this p)eriod,
under whose direction the execution of these acts was carried out. It is an extreme
presentation of the English point of view, making it appear that all the acts were
I>assed primarily for the sake of the colonies and that the Seven Years' War was
"undertaken for their defense only."
But of all the Measures which were pursued for the Benefit of
Trade, those were by far the most important which respected the
Colonies, who have been of late the Darling Object of their Mother
Country's Care: We are not yet recovered from a War undertaken
solely for their Protection: Every Object for which it was begun, is
accomplished; and still greater are obtained than at first were even
thought of; but whatever may be the Value of the Acquisitions in
America, the immediate Benefit of them is to the Colonies; and this
Country feels it only in their Prosperity; for though the Accessions
of Trade and Territory which were obtained by the Peace, are so
many Additions to the Empire and the Commerce of Great Britain at
large, yet they principally affect that Part of her Dominions, and that
Branch of her Trade, to which they immediately relate. To improve
these Advantages, and to forward still further the peculiar Interests
of Colonies, was the chief Aim of the Administration in the Period
now before me. Their Whale-Fishery was encouraged by taking oflE
the heavy Duty under which it laboured; in consequence of which
Gratuity it must now soon entirely overpower our own, and will
probably rival that of the Dutch; so as to supply not only the whole
Demand of this Country, but Part also of the foreign Consumption.
The Restraint laid by the Acts of Navigation upon the Exportation
of Rice, was at the same Time relaxed, and Liberty given to both the
Carolinas and to Georgia, to carry it to foreign Plantations where large^
Cargoes may be annually disposed of. The Culture of Hemp an< '
Flax in America was promoted by Bounties; and another Boimt]
was given upon the native wild Produce of the Continent; the Timber,!
in such Proportions in the several Species of it, as will enable the Colo-i
nists to bring vast Quantities hither. Should the Ends intended]
by all this Liberality be answered, and the Effect be, as in time it{
probably. wUl be, that the foreign Plantations will be supplied wholly]
with Rice, and this Island in a great Measure with Whale Bone and
* CoHsider<Uions m the Trade and Finances of this Kingdom. By Geoxfll
GrenviUe [?] (London, 1769), 61-3.
CAUSES AND CONDUCT OF THE REVOLUTION 163
Oil, with Hemp, Flax, and Timber, from the Colonies, the Encrease of
their Trade will exceed the most sanguine Expectations: The Con-
sumption of these Commodities which they may be able to furnish
cannot be estimated at less than a Million a Year: In all they will
undoubtedly have a Preference, and in some a Monopoly.
At th3 same Time that new Branches of Commerce were thus
given to them, others which they had before were improved. The
Prohibition on the Exportation of American Bar Iron from this King-
dom was taken away by an Act passed in 1765 . . . and a still further
Preference was shewn to the Produce of our West-India Colonies, by
laying heavy Impositions upon the Indigo, Coffee, Sugar, and Melasses
of the foreign Islands imported into North America^ while the same
Commodities raised in our own, were lightly charged at the most, and
some of them entirely free. . . .
Whatever may be the Effects of the Attention thus shewn to the
Colonies, the Benefit will be partially felt here, but principally there:
To them the Whole is gain; we on the contrary in many Respects
sustain a Loss; and if the Interests of the Mother Country could be
distinguished from those of the Colonies, it would be difficult to justify
the Expence she has thereby incurred; for out of her Revenues, the
Bounties upon Hemp, Flax, and Timber must be paid; and on so
much of the British Consumption as shall in consequence of this
Encouragement be supplied from America, there will be a further
Loss of the Duties upon foreign Hemp, Flax, and Timber now imported
here: The Duty too upon Whale-Fins must be taken into the Account
which is another Deduction, avowedly made with a view to give their
Fishery a Preference even to our own; and it is obvious that the
Amount of the Whole, though it cannot easily be estimated, must be
very considerable.
Were there no other Ground to require a Revenue from the Colo-
nies, than as a Return from these Obligations, it would alone be a suf-
ficient Foundation: Add to these the Advantages obtained for them
by the Peace; and the Debt incurred by a War undertaken for their
Defence only; the Distress thereby brought upon the Finances, upon
the Credit, both public and private, upon the Trade, and upon the
People of this Country; and it must be acknowledged that no Time
was ever so seasonable for claiming their Assistance. The Distribution
is too unequal, of Benefits only to the Colonies and of all the Burthens
upon the Mother Country; and yet no more was desired, than that
they should contribute to the Preservation of the Advantages they had
Received, and take upon themselves a small share of the Establish-
i64 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
ment necessary for their own Protection: Upon these Principles
several new Taxes were laid upon the Colonies: Many of them were
indeed, as I have already shewn, rather Regulations of Trade than
Funds of Revenue: But some were intended to answer both Purposes:
In others the Produce was the Principal Object; and yet even the
most productive of all, were of that Kind which is perhaps more tender
of Trade than any other: The same Sum could not have been raised
with so little Oppression by Impost as by Stamp Duties,^ for they do
not even effect some Articles of Commerce more than others; they
do not even fall upon Men of any particular Denomination: They
are heavy upon none because they are paid only occasionally; and
they are collected with more Ease to the Subject than any; but a
distinction between internal and external Taxes was set up in America^
and Occasion was from thence taken to raise Disturbances there,
the Particulars and Consequences of which are of such public Noto-
riety, that it is needless to mention them : . . .
M. Causes of the Revolution^ lyyd *
Dean Tucker wrote with considerable force, not to say acerbity, against the
demands of the colonists. In the extract here quoted he inquires what the real
grievances were that led to the outcry at the time of the Stamp Act, and concludes
in no very friendly tone that they were due to the English interference with smug-
gling, and with the illegal issue of paper money, and to a desire to secure political
independence. Tucker was Dean of Gloucester, and a violent and able partisan.
Upon the Whole therefore, what is the Cause of such an amazing
Outcry as you raise at present? — Not the Stamp Duty itself; all the
World are agreed on that Head; and none can be so ignorant, or so
stupid, as not to see, that this is a mere Sham and Pretence. What
then are the real Grievances, seeing that the Things which you alledge
are only the pretended ones? Why, some of you are exasperated
against the Mother Country, on account of the Revival of certain
Restrictions laid upon their Trade: — I say, a Revival; for the same
Restriction have been the standing Rules of Government from the
Beginning; though not enforced at all Times with equal Strictness,
During the late War, you Americans could not import the Manu-
factures of other Nations (which it is your constant Aim to do, and
* It b impoMible to speak with Certainty of the Produce of any of the .1 wktiVohJ
Taxes. I have therefore throughout followed the usual Calculation, and estimatcdj
the Impoat Duties at 60,000 I. and the Stamp Duties at 100,000 /. per ann.
• Pour Tracts on Political and Commt-nial Suhials. By Josiah Tucker (Glouccs- '
ter, 1776), 132-4, 136-7.
CAUSES AND CONDUCT OF THE REVOLUTION 165
the Mother Country always to prevent) so conveniently as you can
in Tinies of Peace; and therefore, there was no Need of watching you
so narrowly, as far as that Branch of Trade was concerned. But
immediately upon the Peace, the various Manufactures of Europe^
particularly those of France^ which could not find Vent before, were
spread, as it were, over all your Colonies, to the prodigious Detriment
of your Mother Country; and therefore our late Set of Ministers
acted certainly right, in putting in Force the Laws of their Country,
in order to check this growing Evil. If in so doing they committed
any Error; or, if the Persons to whom the Execution of these Laws
were intrusted, exceeded their Instructions; there is no Doubt to be
made, but that all this will be rectified by the present Administration.
And having done that, they will have done all that in Reason you can
expect from them. But alas! the Expectations of an American carry
him much further: For he will ever complain and smuggle, and smuggle
"nd complain, 'till all Restraints are removed, and 'till he can both
uuy and sell, whenever, and wheresoever he pleases. Anything short
of this, is still a Grievance, a Badge of Slavery, an Usurpation on the
natural Rights and Liberties of a free People, and I know not how
many bad Things besides.
But, my good Friend, be assured, that these are Restraints, which
neither the present, nor any future Ministry can exempt you from.
They are the standing Laws of the Kingdom; and God forbid, that
we should allow that dispensing Power to our Ministers, which we
so justly deny to our Kings. In short while you are a Colony, you
must be subordinate to the Mother Country. These are the Terms
and Conditions, on which you were permitted to make your first
Settlements: They are the Terms and Conditions on which you alone
can be entitled to the Assistance and Protection of Great-Britain; — ...
So much as to your first Grievance; and as to your second it is,
beyond Doubt, of a Nature still worse. For many among you are
sorely concerned. That they cannot pay their British Debts with an
American Sponge. This is an intolerable Grievance, and they long
for the day when they shall be freed from this galling Chain. Our
Merchants in London, Bristol, Liverpool, Glasgow, b'c. &'c. perfectly
understand your many Hints and Inuendoes to us, on this Head. But
indeed, lest we should be so dull as not to comprehend your Meaning,
you have spoken out, and proposed on open Association against paying
your just Debts. Had our Debtors in any other Part of the Globe, had
the French or Spaniards proposed the like (and surely they have all
at least an equal Right) what Name would you have given to such
i66 ' READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
Proceedings? But I forget: You are not the faithless French or
Spaniards: You are ourselves: You are honest Englishmen.
Your third Grievance is the Sovereignty of Great- Britain; For
you want to be independent: You wish to be an Empire by itself,
and to be no longer the Province of another. This Spirit is upper-
most; and this Principle is visible in all your Speeches, and all your
Writings, even when you take some Pains to disguise it. — "What!
an Island! A Spot such as this to command the great and mighty
Continent of N orth- America! Preposterous! A Continent, whose
Inhabitants double every five and twenty Years! Who, therefore,
within a Century and a Half will be upwards of an hundred and twenty
Millions of Souls! — Forbid it Patriotism, forbid it Politics, that such
a great and mighty Empire as this, should be held in Subjection by
the paltry Kingdom of Great- Britain! Rather let the Seat of Empire
be transferred; and let it be fixt, where it ought to be, viz. in Great
America!'^
II. Non-importation as a Means of Pressure
A. Unfavorable Balattce of Trade of the Northern American
Colonies, lyoo-iyyj ^
The following table, compiled by Lord Sheffield, shows clearly one of the reasons
for the discontent aroused in New England by the stricter enforcement of the
navigation acts. The northern colonies, many of whose products were denied
access to English markets, had been compelled to develop a trade with the ^^'est
Indies, with southern Europe, and to a small extent with Africa. With the profits
from this trade they had been able to purchase English manufactures. How great
this commerce was may be judged from this table, where the excess of exports in
the northern colonies alone is given as £30,000,000 for the period 1700 to 1773.
When this trade was interrupted by the enforcement of the navigation acts, and
eqiedally when the trade to the West Indies was cut off, the northern colonies were
dqwived of the means of purchasing English manufactured goods.
None of the colonies to the north of Maryland have ever had a
balance in their favour by their imports from and exports to Great
Britain; but on the contrary, a large balance against them, which they
had no means of discharging but by a foreign and circuitous - com-
marcc. By this commerce (except the value of the ships built for
" Ohsenations on the Commerce of the American States. By Lord John SheiVu Id
(ad ediUoo, London, 1784), 346-7.
* Whatever diminution there may be of their circuitous trade, w(^iUiall ^'ain.
tad with the benefit of freight, all the profit connected with a more extensi\c
aavifaUoD.
£
CAUSES AND CONDUCT OF THE REVOLUTION 167
the British merchants, the amount of which cannot possibly be ascer-
tained) they must, since the year 1700, have obtained from other
countries, and remitted to this, upwards of thirty millions sterling
in payment for goods taken from hence, over and above the amount
of all their own produce and fisheries remitted directly.^ By foreign is
meant the trade to the West Indies, Africa, and all parts of Europe,
except Great Britain.
Balance or excess of exports to, and of imports from, the Ameri-
can States from 1700 to 1773:
Excess of Exports Excess of Imports
£ s. d.
The four New England States 13,896,287 17 4^
New York, New Jersey, and Penn-
sylvania, including Delaware
counties 16,941,281 9 4I
30,837,569 69 £ s. d.
Virginia and Maryland 8,155,363 11 5 J
North and South Carolina 2,611,671 13 10
Georgia 123,034 9 7
Excess of exports to the provinces
north of Maryland 30,960,603 16 4 10,767,035 5 3^
Balance or excess of exports to
America over the excess of im-
ports 20,193,568 II i
B. Non-importation Agreements in Boston and New York, lydS ^
In order to protest against the Stamp Act the merchants of Massachusetts,
Rhode Island, New York, and Pennsylvania in 1765 united in a non-importation,
agreement, by which they bound themselves not to import British goods. Because
of the loss of trade British merchants petitioned Parliament to repeal the Stamp Act,
^ There should be added to the value of exports to America, between 2 and
300,0001. sent to Africa annually for the purchase of slaves, which were chiefly im-
ported by our merchants into the revolted provinces. The real exports of England,
then, to those provinces would be 1,531,206 1. instead of 1,331,206 1., the average
annual export of ten years to the American States, as in the annexed Tables, and as
the whole imports from those states into England were only valued at 743,560 1.,
they must have been bad paymasters indeed, or have had as much foreign and
circuitous trade for their exports as they had directly with Great Britain, to be
enabled to pay 20 s. in the pound.
"^ An Historical and Chronological Deduction of the Origin of Commerce. By
Adam Anderson (London, 1789), IV, 118-119.
i68 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
which was done. Again in 1 768 the same method of boycott was employed, with
equally successful results. The following extract states briefly the agreement made
by Boston merchants.
From the voluminous miscellany of public writings, which the
colony transactions of the present year produced, we shall only select
the following agreements entered into by the inhabitants of Boston
and New York.
"The merchants and traders in the town of Boston, having taken
into consideration the deplorable situation of the trade, and the many
difficulties it at present labours under, on account of the scarcity of
money, which is daily increasing for want of the other remittances to
discharge our debts in Great Britain, and the large sums collected by
the officers of the Customs for duties on goods imported; the heavy
taxes levied to discharge the debts contracted by the Government in
the late war; the embarrassments and restrictions laid on the trade
by the several late acts of Parliament; together with the bad success
of our cod fishery this season, and the discouraging prospect of the
whale fishery, by which our principal sources of remittances are like
to be greatly diminished, and we, thereby, rendered unable to pay the
debts we owe the merchants in Great Britain, and to continue the
importation of goods from thence.
"We, the subscribers, in order to relieve the trade, under those
discouragements, to promote industry, frugality, and economy, and
to discourage luxury, and every kind of extravagance, do promise and
engage to and with each other as follows:
"First, That we will not send for or import from Great Britain,
either upon our own account, or upon commission, this fall, any other
goods than what are already ordered for the fall supply.
"Secondly, That we will not send for or import any kind of goods
or merchandize from Great Britain, either on our own account, or on
commissions, or any otherwise, from January i, 1769, to January i,
1770, except salt, coals, fish-hooks and lines, hamp and duck bar lead
and shot, wool cards and wool wire.
"Thirdly, That we will not purchase of any factor or others, any
kind of goods imported from Great Britain from January i, 1769, to
January i, 1770.
"Fourthly, That we will not import, on our own account, or on
commissions, or purchase of any who shall import from any other
colony in America, from January 1769 to January 1770, any tea,
gUift, paper, or other goods, commonly imported from Great
Britain.
CAUSES AND CONDUCT OF THE REVOLUTION 169
" Fifthly, That we will not, from and after the first of January 1769,
import into this province any tea, paper, glass, or painter's colours,
until the act imposing duties on those articles shall be repealed.
''In witness whereof, &c." — Dated August i, 1768.
On the 15th of September following, the inhabitants of New York,
incited, according to their own declaration, by the example of those
of Boston, entered into a similar agreement for the non-use, and non-
importation of British produce and manufactures.
C. Effect in England of Stamp Act, 1765 ^
The value of the policy of non-importation by the colonies in order to exert
pressure upon Parliament through English merchants is well illustrated by Adam
Smith's comment. This "nation of shop-keepers," as he called them in another
place, preferred profits to principles.
. . . The expectation of a rupture with the colonies, accordingly,
has struck the people of Great Britain with more terror than they ever
felt for a Spanish armada, or a French invasion. It was this terror,
whether well or ill grounded, which rendered the repeal of the stamp
act, among the merchants at least, a popular measure. In the total
exclusion from the colony market, was it to last only for a few years,
the greater part of our merchants used to fancy that they foresaw an
entire stop to their trade; the greater part of our master manufac-
turers, the entire ruin of their business; and the greater part of our
workmen, an end of their employment. A rupture with any of our
neighbours upon the continent, though likely too to occasion some
stop or interruption in the employments of some of all these different
orders of people, is foreseen, however, without any such general
emotion. . . .
D. Non-importation in North Carolina, 1774 ^
The closure of the port of Boston in 1774 aroused the other colonies, and a
third non-importation association was agreed to by the Continental Congress, to
go into effect on December i. The following resolutions from North Carolina,
passed a month before the Continental Congress voted to approve of such action,
shows the unanimity of feeling which characterized the colonies by this time.
^ A n Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations. By Adam
Smith (Edinburgh, 1776). Edited by Edwin Cannan (London, 1904), II, 105-6.
^ The Colonial Records of North Carolina (Raleigh, 1886), IX, 1024-6. For
proceedings of the Safety Committees, showing how the agreement was enforced,
see ibid., IX, iioi, 1103, 1107 ff.
I70 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
Proceedings of the Freeholders in Rowan County.
August S^^ 1774-
At a meeting August S^^ 1774, The following resolves were unani-
mously agreed to, . . .
Resolved, That the Right to impose Taxes or Duties to be paid by
the Inhabitants within this Province for any purpose whatsoever is
peculiar and essential to the General Assembly in whom the legislative
Authority of the Colony is vested. . . .
Resolved, That a general Association between all the American
Colonies, not to import from Great Britain any Commodity what-
soever (except such things as shall be hereafter excepted by the
General Congress of this Province) ought to be entered into and not
dissolved until the just Rights of the said Colonies are restored to
them, and the cruel Acts of the British Parliament against the
Massachusetts Bay and Town of Boston are repealed.
Resolved, That no friend to the Rights and Liberties of America
ought to purchase any Commodity whatsoever, except such as shall be
excepted, which shall be imported from Great Britain after the gen-
eral Association shall be agreed upon.
Resolved, That every kind of Luxury, Dissipation, and Extrava-
gance ought to be banished from among us.
Resolved, That manufactures ought to be encouraged by opening
Subscriptions for that purpose, or by any other proper means.
Resolved, That the African Trade is injurious to this Colony,
obstructs the Population of it by freemen, prevents manufactures,
and other Useful Emigrants from Europe from settling among us,
and occasions an annual increase of the Balance of Trade against the
Colonies.
Resolved, Thai liie raising of Sheep, Hemp and Flax ought to be
encouraged.
Resolved, That to be cloathed in manufactures fabricated in the
Colonies ought to be considered as a Badge and Distinction of Respect
and true Patriotbm.
E. Petition of London Merchants for Reconciliation , 7775 *
The success of the policy of non-importation by the colonists, through the
preisure they exerted upon British merchants, is well illustrated by this petition of
London merchants to the House of Commons to apply "healing remedies" to the
interrupted trade between the two countries.
» Parliamentary History of England. By Hansard (London, 1813), XVUL
l6a-i79.
I
CAUSES AND CONDUCT OF THE REVOLUTION 171
Debate in the Commons on the Petitions of the Merchants of London
and Bristol for Reconciliation with America. Jan. 23. Mr. Alderman
Hayley said he had a petition from the merchants of the city of London
concerned in the commerce to North-America, to that honourable
House, and desired leave to present the same, which being given, it
was brought up arid read, setting forth;
''That the petitioners are all essentially interested in the trade to
North-America, either as exporters and importers, or as venders of
British and foreign goods for exportation to that country; and that
the petitioners have exported, or sold for exportation, to the British
colonies in North-America, very large quantities of the manufacture
of Great Britain and Ireland, and in particular the staple articles of
woollen, iron, and linen, also those of cotton, silk, leather, pewter,
tin, copper, and brass, with almost every British manufacture; also
large quantities of foreign linens and other articles imported into these
kingdoms, from Flanders, Holland, Germany, the East Countries,
Portugal, Spain, and Italy, which are generally received from those
countries in return for British manufactures; and that the petitioners
have likewise exported, or sold for exportation, great quantities of
the various species of goods imported into this kingdom from the East-
Indies, part of which receive additional manufacture in Great Britain;
and that the petitioners receive returns from North America to this
kingdom directly, viz. pig and bar iron, timber, staves, naval stores,
tobacco, rice, indigo, deer and other skins, beaver and furs, train oil,
whalebone, bees wax, pot and pearl ashes, drugs, and dying woods,
with some bullion, and also wheat flour, Indian corn and salted pro-
visions, when, on account of scarcity in Great Britain, those articles
are permitted to be imported; and that the petitioners receive returns
circuitously from Ireland (for flax seed, &c. exported from North
America) by bills of exchange on the merchants of this city trading to
Ireland, for the proceeds of linens, &c. imported into these kingdoms
from the West Indies; in return for provisions, lumber and cattle,
exported from North America, for the use and support of the West
India islands, by bills of exchange on the West India merchants, for
the proceeds of sugar, molasses, rum, cotton, coffee, or other produce,
imported from those islands into these kingdoms; from Italy, Spain,
Portugal, France, Flanders, Germany, Holland, and the East Coun-
tries, by bills of exchange or bullion in return for wheat flour, rice,
Indian corn, fish, and lumber exported from the British colonies in
North America, for the use of those countries; and that the petitioners
have great reason to believe, from the best informations they can
172 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
obtain, that on the balance of this extensive commerce, there is now
due from the colonies in North America to the said city only, 2,000,-
000/. sterling, and upwards; and that, by the direct commerce with
the colonies, and the circuitous trade thereon depending, some thou-
sands of ships and vessels are employed, and many thousands of
seamen are bred and maintained, thereby encreasing the naval strength
and power of Great Britain; and that in the year 1765, there was a
great stagnation of the commerce between Great Britain and her
colonies, in consequence of an Act for granting and applying certain
stamp-duties and other duties, in the British colonies and planta-
tions in America, by which the merchants trading to North America,
and the artificers employed in the various manufactures consumed
in those countries, were subjected to many hardships; and that, in
the following year, the said Act was repealed, under an express dec-
laration of the legislature, that the continuance of the said Act would
be attended with many inconveniences and might be productive of
consequences greatly detrimental to the commercial interests of these
kingdoms; upon which repeal, the trade to the British colonies imme-
diately resumed its former flourishing state; and that in the year
1767, an Act passed for granting certain duties in the British colonies
and plantations in America, which imposed certain duties, to be
paid in America, on tea, glass, red and white lead, painters' colours,
paper, paste-board, mill-board, and scale-board, when the commerce
with the colonies was again interrupted; and that in the year 1770,
such parts of the said Act as imposed duties on glass, red and white
lead, painters' colours, paper, paste-board, mill-board, and scale-
board, were repealed, when the trade to America soon revived, except-
ing the article of tea, on which a duty was continued, to be demanded
on its importation into America, whereby that branch of our com-
merce was nearly lost; and that, in the year 1773, an Act passed to
allow a drawback of the duties of customs on the exportation of tea
to his Majesty's colonies or plantations in America, and to empower
the commissioners of the Treasury to grant licenses to the East India
Company to export tea, duty free; and by the operations of those and
other laws, the minds of his Majesty's subjects in the British colonies
have been greatly disquieted, a total stop is now put to the export
trade with the greatest and the most important part of North America,
the public revenue is threatened with a large and fatal diminution,
the petitioners with grievous distress, and thousands of industrious
artificers and manufacturers with utter ruin; under these alarming
circumstances, the petitioners receive no small comfort, from a per-
CAUSES AND CONDUCT OF THE REVOLUTION 173
suasion that the representatives of the people, newly delegated to the
most important of all trusts, will take the whole of these weighty
matters into their most serious consideration; and therefore praying
the House, that they will enter into a full and immediate examination
of that system of commercial policy which was formerly adopted,
and uniformly maintained to the happiness, and advantage of both
countries, and will apply such healing remedies as can alone restore
and establish the commerce between Great Britain and her colonies
on a permanent foundation; and that the petitioners may be heard
by themselves, or agents, in support of the said petition."
F. Petition of West India Planters for Reconciliation, 7775 ^
The effects of the non-importation agreements of the colonists were felt not only
by London merchants, but also by West India planters, who were deprived at the
same time of needed supplies and of a market for their products. They also brought
pressure to bear upon Parliament to repeal the obnoxious legislation which had led
to this situation.
Petition of the West India Planters to the Commons respecting the
American Non-Importation Agreement. Feb. 2 [1775]. A Petition
of the planters of his Majesty's sugar colonies residing in Great Britain,
and of the merchants of London trading to the said colonies, was
presented to the House, and read; setting forth,
"That the petitioners are exceedingly alarmed at an Agreement
and Association entered into, by the Congress held at Philadelphia
in North America, on the 5th of Sept. 1774, whereby the members
thereof agreed and associated, for themselves and the inhabitants of
the several provinces lying between Nova Scotia and Georgia, that
from and after the ist of Sept. 1774, they would not import into
British America any melasses, syrups, paneles, coffee, or piemento,
from the British plantations; and that after the loth of Sept. 1775,
if the Acts and the parts of the Acts of the British parliament therein
mentioned, are not repealed, they would not directly, or indirectly,
import any merchandize or commodity whatsoever to the West Indies;
and representing to the House that the British property in the West
India islands amounts to upwards of 30 millions sterling; and that a
further property of many millions is employed in the commerce created
by the said islands, a commerce comprehending Africa, the East
Indies and Europe; and that the whole profits and produce of these
^ Parliamentary History of England. By Hansard (London, 1813), XVIII,
219-221.
174 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
capitals ultimately center in Great Britain, and add to the national
wealth, while the navigation necessary to all its branches, establishes
a strength which wealth can neither purchase nor balance; and that
the sugar plantations in the West Indies are subject to a greater variety
of contingencies than many other species of property, from their
necessary dependence on external support; and that therefore, should
any interruption happen in the general system of their commerce,
the great national stock thus vested and employed must become un-
profitable and precarious; and that the profits arising from the present
state of the said islands, and that are likely to arise from their future
improvement, in a great measure depend on a free and reciprocal
intercourse between them and the several provinces of North America,
from whence they are furnished with provisions and other supplies
absolutely necessary for their support and the maintenance of their
plantations; and that the scarcity and high price, in Great Britain
and other parts of Europe, of those articles of indispensible necessity
which they now derive from the middle colonies of America, and the
inadequate population in some parts of that continent, with the dis-
tance, danger, and uncertainty, of the navigation from others, forbid
the p>etitioners to hope for a supply in any degree proportionate to
their wants; and that, if the first part of the said Agreement and
Association for a non-importation hath taken place, and shall be
continued, the same will be highly detrimental to the sugar colonies;
and that, if the second part of the said Agreement and Association
for a non-exportation shall be carried into execution, which the peti-
tioners do firmly believe will happen, unless the harmony that sub-
sisted a few years ago between this kingdom and the provinces of
America, to the infinite advantage of both, be restored, the islands,
which are supplied with most of their subsistence from thence, will
be reduced to the utmost distress, and the trade between all the islands
and this kingdom will of course be obstructed, to the diminution of the
public revenue, to the extreme injury of a great number of planters,
and to the great prejudice of the merchants, not only by the said
obstruction, but also by the delay of payment of the principal and
interest of an immense debt due from the former to the latter; and
therefore praying the House, to take into their most serious consid-
eration that great political system of the colonies heretofore so very
beneficial to the mother country and her dependencies, and adopt
such measures as to them shall seem meet, to prevent the evils with
which the petitioners are threatened, and to preserve the intercourse
between the West India islands and the northern colonies, to the
CAUSES AND CONDUCT OF THE REVOLUTION 175
general harmony and lasting benefit of the whole British empire; and
that they may be heard, by themselves, their agents, or counsel, in
support of their Petition."
Ordered to be referred to the consideration of the committee on
the Petition of the merchants of London, concerned in the commerce
of North America.
III. Continental Paper Money
A. Continental Paper Money, lyyj-iySo ^
When the Revolution began the Continental Congress had no authority to levy
taxes, nor power to borrow money by issuing bonds. It was therefore compelled to
resort to the issue of paper money as practically the only financial resource at their
command. Under the pressure of their necessities, however, they issued too much,
and as soon as it was overissued it began to depreciate, until finally it became worth-
less and was ultimately repudiated. A defense by Franklin of the use of this
continental currency is here given.
Much conversation having arisen lately on the subject of this
money, and few persons being well acquainted with the nature of it,
you may possibly oblige many of your readers by the following account
of it.
When Great Britain commenced the present war upon the colonies,
they had neither arms nor ammunition, nor money to purchase them
or to pay soldiers. The new government had not immediately the
consistence necessary for collecting heavy taxes; nor would taxes
that could be raised within the year during peace, have been sufficient
for a year's expense in time of war; they therefore printed a quantity
of paper bills, each expressing to be of the value of a certain number
of Spanish dollars, from one to thirty; with these they paid, clothed,
and fed their troops, fitted out ships, and supported the war during
five years against one of the most powerful nations of Europe.
The paper thus issued, passed current in all the internal commerce
of the United States at par with silver during the first year; supplying
the place of the gold and silver formerly current, but which was sent
out of the country to purchase arms, &c., or to defray expenses of
the army in Canada ; but the great number of troops necessary to be
kept on foot to defend a coast of near five hundred leagues in length,
from an enemy, who, being masters at sea, could land troops where
^ Of the Paper Money of the United States of America. By Benjamin Franklin.
In Works (Sparks edition, Boston, 1840), 11,421-4.
176 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
they pleased, occasioned such a demand for money, and such frequent
additional emissions of new bills, that the quantity became much
greater than was wanted for the purposes of commerce; and, the
commerce being diminished by the war, the surplus quantity of cash
was by that means also proportionately augmented.
It has been long and often observed, that when the current money
of a country is augmented beyond the occasions for money, as a
medium of commerce, its value as money diminishes. . . .
. . . Paper money not being easily received out of the country
that makes it, if the quantity becomes excessive, the depreciation is
quicker and greater.
Thus the excessive quantities which necessity obliged the Ameri-
cans to issue for continuing the war, occasioned a depreciation of
value, which, commencing towards the end of 1776, has gone on
augmenting, till at the beginning of the present year, fifty, sixty,
and as far as seventy dollars in paper were reckoned not more than
equal to one dollar in silver, and the prices of all things rose in
proportion. . . .
The general effect of the depreciation among the inhabitants of
the States has been this, that it has operated as a gradual tax upon
them, their business has been done and paid for by the paper money,
and every man has paid his share of the tax according to the time he
retained any of the money in his hands, and to the depreciation within
that time. Thus it has proved a tax on money, a kind of property
very difficult to be taxed in any other mode; and it has fallen more
equally than many other taxes, as those people paid most, who, being
richest, had most money passing through their hands.
B. Depreciation of Continental Paper Money, lyy^-i'jyg ^
The following table of depreciation by Thomas Jefferson shows that the de-
predation did not begin until the year 1777, and after $14,000,000 had been issued.
After that, however, it went on rapidly as a result of the great overissue by Con-
gresft, until the last emission brought in only 2\ cents for every $1.00 issued.
* Quoted in Historical Sketches of American Paper Currency, Second Series.
By Henry Phillips (Roxbury, 1866), 199.
I
CAUSES AND CONDUCT OF THE REVOLUTION
77
DEPRECIATION OF THE CONTINENTAL CURRENCY
Jefferson's Table of Emissions
Worth of the Sum Emitted
Emissions
Sum Emitted
Depreciation
in Silver Dollars
1775, June 23
$ 2,000,000
$2,000,000
Nov; 29
1776, Feb. 17
Aug. 13
1777, May 20
3,000,000
4,000,000
5,000,000
5,000,000
3,000,000
4,000,000
5,000,000
1,877,273
2, 2, 3
Aug. 15
1,000,000
3
m,.2>2>i\
Nov. 7
1 ,000,000
4
250,000
Dec. 3
1,000,000
4
250,000
1778, Jan. 8
1,000,000
4
250,000
Jan. 22
2,000,000
4
500,000
Feb. 16
2,000,000
5
400,000
Mar. 5
2,000,000
5
400,000
April 4
1,000,000
6
i66,666|
April II
5,000,000
6
833,333!
April 18
500,000
6
83,333!
May 22
5,000,000
5
1,000,000
June 20
5,000,000
4
1,250,000
July 30
5,000,000
Ah
I, III, III
Sept. 5
5,000,000
5
1,000,000
Sept. 26
10,000,100
5
2,000,020
Nov. 4
10,000,100
6
1,666,6831
Dec. 14
10,000,100
6
i,666,683i
1779, Jan. 14
24,447,620*
8
3,055,9521
Feb. 3
5,000,160
10
500,016
Feb. 12
5,000,160
10
500,016
April 2
5,000,160
17
294,127
May 5
10,000,100
24
416,670!
June 4
10,000,100
20
500,005
June 17
15,000,280
20
750,014
Sept. 17
15,000,260
24
625,010!
Oct. 14
5,000,180
30 '
166,672!
Nov. 17
10,050,540
38I
261,053
Nov. 29
10,000,140
38^
259,743
$200,000,000
$36,367,719!
* The sum actually voted was $50,000,400, but part of it was for exchange of
old bills, without saying how much. It is presumed that these exchanges absorbed
$25,552,780, because $24,447,620 with all the other emissions preceding September
2, 1779, will amount to $159,948,880, the sum which Congress declared to be then
in circulation.
178 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
C. Effects of Continental Paper Money, 177 5- 17 80 *
The economic and social effects of the depreciation of the continental paper
money in South Carolina are here pictured. This may be accepted as typical of
conditions in all the colonies during this period.
That the money should finally sink, or that it should be redeemed
by a scale of depreciation, were events neither forseen nor expected
by the bulk of the people. The Congress and the local Legislatures,
for the first five years of the war, did not entertain the most distant
idea of such a breach of public faith. The generality of the friends
of the revolution, reposing unlimited confidence in the integrity of
their rulers, the plighted faith of government, and the success of the
cause of America, amused themselves with the idea that in a few years
their paper dollars, under the influence of peace and independence,
would be sunk by equal taxes or realized into silver at their nominal
value; and that, therefore, the sellers would ultimately increase their
estates in the same proportion that the currency had depreciated.
The plunderings and devastations of the enemy made several
think that their property would be much safer, when turned into
money, than when subject to the casualties of war. The disposition
to sell was in a great degree proportioned to the confidence in the
justice and final success of the revolution, superadded to expectations
of a speedy termination of the war. The most sanguine Whigs were,
therefore, oftenest duped by the fallacious sound of high prices.
These principles operated so extensively that the property of the in-
habitants, in a considerable degree, changed its owners. Many
opulent persons, of ancient families, were ruined by selling paternal
estates for a depreciating paper currency, which, in a few weeks,
would not replace half of the real property in exchange for which it
was obtained. Many bold adventurers made fortunes in a short
time by running in debt beyond their abilities. Prudence ceased to be
a virtue, and rashness usurped its place. The warm friends of
America, who never despaired of their country, and who cheerfully
risked their fortunes in its support, lost their j)roperty; while the
timid, who looked forward to the re-establishement of British govern-
ment, not only saved their former possessions, but often increased
them. In the American revolution, for the first time, the friends of
the successful party were the losers.
» The History of South Carolina. By David Ramsay. (Written 1808. Pub-
Usbed, Newberry, S. C, 1858), 98, 102.
CAUSES AND CONDUCT OF THE REVOLUTION 179
The enthusiasm of the Americans, and their confidence in the
money, gave the Congress the same advantage in carrying on the
war which old countries derive from the anticipation of their per-
manent funds. It would have been impossible to have kept together
an American army for so many years without this paper expedient.
Though the bills of credit operated as a partial tax on the monied
interest, and ruined many individuals, yet it was productive of great
national benefits by enabling the popular leaders to carry on a neces-
sary defensive war. . . .
The paper currency continued to have a partial circulation in
the northern States for a year after a scale of depreciation was fixed.
It gradually diminished in value till the summer of 178 1. By com-
mon consent, it then ceased to have any currency. Like an aged
man, expiring by the decays of nature without a sigh or a groan, it
gently fell asleep in the hands of its last possessors, and continued
so for ten years; when the Congress paper dollars were funded at the
rate of 100 for one of silver.
D. Issues of Paper Money by the States, iy8i-iy88 *
After the disappearance of the continental paper money from circulation, seven
of the states, under the plea of necessity, plunged afresh into paper money emissions
during the years 1781 to 1788. The history of these issues was the same as that
of the continental currency — overissue, depreciation, and disturbance of trade.
A vivid picture of the effects in two of the states is drawn for us by Brissot de War-
ville, a French traveler of Uberal views, who usually had only words of praise for
things American.
The port of Newport is considered as one of the best in the United
States. The bottom is good, the harbour capable of receiving the
largest ships, and seems destined by nature to be of great consequence.
This place was one of the principal scenes of the last war. The
successive arrival of the American, English, and French armies, left
here a considerable quantity of money .^
Since the peace every thing is changed.^ The reign of solitude
is only interrupted by groups of idle men, standing with folded arms
at the corners of the streets; houses falling to ruin; miserable shops,
^ New Travels in the United States of America. By Jean Pierre Brissot de
Warville (Dublin, 1792), 144-7, 176-8.
^ The EngUsh destroyed all the fine trees of ornament and fruit: they took
a pleasure in devastation.
^ This town owed a part of its prosperity to the slave trade, which is at present
suppressed.
i8o READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
which present nothing but a few coarse stuffs, or baskets of apples,
and other articles of little value; grass growing in the public square,
in front of the court of justice; rags stuffed in the windows, or hung
upon hideous women and lean unquiet children.
Ever>' thing announces misery, the triumph of ill faith, and the
influence of a bad government. . . .
At Newport the people, deceived by two or three knaves, have
brought on their own misery, and destroyed the blessings which Na-
ture had lavished upon them. They have themselves sanctioned
fraud; and this act has rendered them odious to their neighbors,
driven commerce from their doors, and labour from their fields.
Read again, my friend, the charming description given of this
town and this State, by M, de Crevecoeur.^ It is not exaggerated.
Every American whom I have questioned on this subject, has described
to me its ancient splendor, and its natural advantages, whether for
conmierce, agriculture, or the enjoyments of life.
The State of Rhode Island will never again see those happy days,
till they take from circulation their paper money, and reform their
government.
. . . but this State [New Jersey] is ravaged by a political scourge,
more terrible than either; it is paper money. This paper is still,
in New Jersey, what the people call a legal tender, that is, you arc
obliged to receive it at its nominal value, as a legal payment.
I saw, in this journey, many inconveniences resulting from thi>
fictitious money. It gives birth to an infamous kind of traffic, that
of buying and selling it, by deceiving the ignorant; a commerce
which discourages industry, corrupts the morals, and is a great
detriment to the public. This kind of stock-jobber is the enemy to
his fellow-citizens. He makes a science of deceiving; and this science
is extremely contagious. It introduces a general distrust. A person
can neither sell his land, nor borrow money upon it; for sellers and
lenders may be paid in a medium which may still depreciate, they know
not to what degree it may depreciate. A friend dares not trust his
friend. Instances of perfidy of this kind have been known, that are
horrible. Patriotism is consequently at an end, cultivation Ian
gui.shes, and commerce declines. How is it possible, said I to Mr.
Livingston, that a country, so rich, can have recourse to paper money?
New Jersey furnishes productions in abundance to New York and
' LeUersfrom an American Parmer (1770-1781). By St. John de Crdvecaur
(Undon, 1783).— Ed.
CAUSES AND CONDUCT OF THE REVOLUTION i8i
Philadelphia. She draws money, then, constantly from those places;
she is their creditor. And shall a creditor make use of a resource
which can be proper only for a miserable debtor; How is it that the
members of your legislature have not made these reflections? The
reason of it is very simple, replied he: At the close of the ruinous
war, that we have experienced, the greater part of our citizens were
burdened with debts. They saw in this paper money, the means of
extricating themselves; and they had influence enough with their
representatives to force them to create it. — But the evil falls at length
on the authors of it, said I; they must be paid themselves, as well as
pay others, in this same paper; why do they not see that it dis-
honours their country, that it ruins all kinds of honest industry, and
corrupts the morals of the people ; Why do thpy not repeal this legal
tender? A strong interest opposes it, replied he, of stock-jobbers and
speculators. They wish to prolong this miserable game, in which
they are sure to be the winners, though the ruin of their country
should be the consequence. We expect relief only from the new
situation, which takes away from the States the power of making
paper-money. All honest people wish the extinction of it, when
silver and gold would reappear; and our national industry would soon
repair the ravages of the war.
IV. Social Effects of the Revolution
Views of a Contemporary, I'/y^-iyS^^
Whatever else it may involve war always brings changes; it throws men out of
their accustomed callings and makes new demands upon them. The War of the
Revolution, which severed the poUtical ties with England and introduced a new
government, which interrrupted the ordinary lines of trade and disorganized
business by the introduction of a depreciating paper money, had particularly marked
effects. These are described by Ramsay, a physician of South Carolina, and a very
able and judicious observer of contemporary events.
The American revolution, on the one hand, brought forth great
vices; but on the other hand, it called forth many virtues, and gave
occasion for the display of abilities which, but for that event, would
have been lost to the world. When the war began, the Americans
were a mass of husbandmon, merchants, mechanics and fishermen;
but the necessities of the country gave a spring to the active powers
of the inhabitants, and set them on thinking, speaking and acting,
^ The History of the American Revolution. By David Ramsay (Philadelphia,
1789), II, 315-6.
i82 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
in a line far beyond that to which they had been accustomed. The
difference between nations is not so much owing to nature, as to
education and circumstances. While the Americans were guided by
the leading strings of the mother country, they had no scope nor
encouragement for exertion. All the departments of government
were established and executed for them, but not by them. In the
years 1775 and 1776 the country, being suddenly thrown into a
situation that needed the abilities of all its sons, these generally took
their places, each according to the bent of his inclination. As they
severally pursued their objects with ardor, a vast expansion of the
human mind speedily followed. This displayed itself in a variety
of ways. It was found that their talents for great stations did not
differ in kind, but only in degree, from those which were necessary
for the proper discharge of the ordinary business of civil society. . . .
... It seemed as if the war not only required, but created
talents. Men whose minds were warmed with the love of liberty,
and whose abilities were improved by daily exercise, and sharpened
with a laudable ambition to serve their distressed country, spoke,
wrote, and acted, with an energy far surpassing all expectations
which could be reasonably founded on their previous acquirements.
The Americans knew but little of one another, previous to the
revolution. Trade and business had brought the inhabitants of
their seaports acquainted with each other, but the bulk of the people
in the interior country were unacquainted with their fellow citizens.
A continental army, and a Congress composed of men from all the
States, by freely mixing together, were assimilated into one mass.
Individuals of both, mingling with the citizens, disseminated prin-
ciples of union among them. Local prejudices abated. By frequent
collision asperities were worn off, and a foundation was laid for the
establbhment of a nation, out of discordant materials. Intermar-
riages between men and women of different States were much more
common than before the war, and became an additional cement to
the union. Unreasonable jealousies had existed between the inhab-
itants of the eastern and of the southern States; but on becoming
better acquainted with each other, these in a great measure subsided.
A wi.scr policy prevailed. Men of liberal minds led the way in dis-
couraging local distinctions, and the great body of the pcoj^le, as
won as reason got the better of prejudice, found that their best
interests would be most effectually promoted by such practices and
sentiments as were favourable to union. Religious bigotry had
broken in upon the peace of various sects, before the American war
CAUSES AND CONDUCT OF THE REVOLUTION 183
This was kept up by partial establishments, and by a dread that
the church of England through the power of the mother country,
would be made to triumph over all other denominations. These
apprehensions were done away by the revolution. . . . The world
will soon see the result of an experiment in politics, and be able to
determine whether the happiness of society is increased by religious
establishments, or diminished by the want of them.
Though schools and colleges were generally shut up during the
war, yet many of the arts and sciences were promoted by it. The
Geography of the United States before the revolution was but little
known; but the marches of the armies, and the operations of war,
gave birth to many geographical enquiries and discoveries, which
otherwise would not have been made. . . . The necessities of the
States led to the study of Tactics, Fortification, Gunnery, and a
variety of other arts connected with war, and diffused a knowledge
of them among a peaceable people, who would otherwise have had
no inducement to study them. . . .
The science of government, has been more generally diffused
among the Americans by means of the revolution. The policy of
Great Britain, in throwing them out of her protection, induced a
necessity of establishing independent constitutions. This led to
reading and reasoning on the subject. The many errors that were
at first committed by unexperienced statesmen, have been a practical
comment on the folly of unbalanced constitutions, and injudicious
laws. . . .
When Great Britain first began her encroachments on the colonies,
there were few natives of America who had distinguished themselves
as speakers^ or writers, but the controversy between the two countries
multiplied their number. . . .
. . . Such have been some of the beneficial effects, which have
resulted from that expansion of the human mind, which has been
produced by the revolution, but these have not been without alloy.
To overset an established government unhinges many of those
principles, which bind individuals to each other. A long time, and
much prudence, will be necessary to reproduce a spirit of union and
that reverence for government, without which society is a rope of
sand. The right of the people to resist their rulers, when invading
their liberties, forms the corner stone of the American republics.
This principle, though just in itself, is not favourable to the tran-
quillity of present establishments. The maxims and measures,
which in the years 1774 and 1775 were successfully inculcated and
i84 READLNGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
adopted by American patriots, for oversetting the established
government, will answer a similar purpose when recurrence is had
to them by factious demagogues, for disturbing the freest govern-
ments that were ever devised.
War never fails to injure the morals of the people engaged in it.
The American war, in particular, had an unhappy influence of this
kind. Being begun without funds or regular establishments, it could
not be carried on without violating private rights; and in its progress,
it involved a necessity for breaking solemn promises, and plighted
public faith. The failure of national justice, which was in some
degree unavoidable, increased the difficulties of performing private
engagements, and weakened that sensibility to the obligations of
public and private honor, which is a security for the punctual per-
formance of contracts. . . .
On the whole, the literary, political, and military talents of the
citizens of the United States have been improved by the revolution,
but their moral character is inferior to what it formerly was. So
great is the change for the worse, that the friends of public order
are loudly called upon to exert their utmost abilities, in extirpating
their vicious principles and habits, which have taken deep root during
the late convulsions.
1%S
/
CHAPTER VI
AMERICAN COMMERCE AND COMMERCIAL POLICY,
^-^ 1783-1812
I. Efforts to Secure a Commercial Treaty with England
A. England should not make a Commercial Treaty with the United
States, 1783 1
After peace was declared and political independence was secured, the first
question that presented itself to the new nation was that of the terms upon which she
would carry on trade with other nations. The United States desired to make
commercial treaties with other nations guaranteeing reciprocal commercial privi-
leges, and endeavored, though unsuccessfully, to incorporate some such provisions
in the treaty of peace with England. Pitt, who had just become prime minister,
tried in turn to secure the adoption of a treaty that would grant freedom of trade
between the United States and the British colonies as well as Great Britain. It was
against this proposal that Lord Sheffield wrote his well-known book, urging that no
action be taken, as the Americans must buy of England in any case.
We are told it is proper to court the trade with the American
States, but their treaties with France and Holland in direct terms
forbid our being put on a better footing than those countries.^
The state of our manufactures make it unnecessary, and nothing
can be more weak than the idea of courting commerce.^ America
^ Observations on the Commerce of the American States. By Lord John Sheffield
(ist edition, London, 1783), 59-70, passim.
2 Article II, of the Treaty of Commerce between France and the United
States of America, "The most Christian King and the United States engage
mutually not to grant any particular favour to other nations, in respect of
commerce and navigation, which shall not immediately become common to the
other party, who shall enjoy the same favour freely."
3 By ineffectual and unnecessary attempts to court American commerce,
we shall disgust nations with whom we have great intercourse, and prejudice
the best trade we have. Our exports to the Baltic and the countries North of
Holland are equal to what our exports to the American States were at any time,
and more real British shipping has been employed to the North, than had ever
been employed to the American States. Before the war, very few British ships
went to the ports north of Philadelphia; they went principally to the Southern
States. . . .
i86 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
will have from us what she cannot get cheaper and better elsewhere,
and she will sell to us what we want from her as cheap as she will to
others. . . . The truth is, we want little of her produce in Great-
Britain, coarse tobacco excepted. The finest tobacco grows in the
islands, and in South America. The indigo of the islands and of
South America is infinitely better than that of North America, but
we must take that and naval stores, and other articles from the
American States which may be got as good or better elsewhere, in
return for our manufactures, instead of money. In payment, for
want of other sufficient returns, large quantities of tobacco must
come to Great-Britain, and we can afford to give the best price for
it, by taking it in exchange for our manufactures. . . .
Instead of exaggerating the loss suffered by the dismemberment
of the empire, our thoughts may be employed to more advantage
in considering what our situation really is, and the greatest advantage
that can be derived from it. It will be found better than we expect,
nor is the independence of the American States, notwithstanding
their connection with France, likely to interfere with us so essentially
as has been apprehended, except as to the carrying trade, the nursery '
for seamen. The carriage of our produce is nothing in comparison
with that of America; a few tobacco ships will carry back as much
of our manufactures as all the American States will consume. We
must therefore retain the carrying trade wherever we possibly can. —
But the demand for our manufactures will continually encrease with
the population of America. Those who have been disposed to de-
spond may comfort themselves with the prospect, that if the American
States should hereafter be able to manufacture for themselves, as the
consumption of the manufactures of England decreases with them,
the demand will encrease elsewhere; . . .
If manufacturers should emigrate from Europe to America, at
least nine-tenths will become farmers; they will not work at manu-
factures when they can get double the profit by farming.
No American articles are so necessary to us, as our manufactures,
&c., are to the Americans, and almost every article of the produce
of the American States, which is brought into Europe, we may have *
at least as good and as cheap, if not better, elsewhere. Both as a
friend and an enemy America has been burthensome to Great Britain.
It may be some satisfaction to think, that by breaking off rather
prematurely, Great Britain may find herself in a better situation in
respect to America, than if she had fallen off when more ripe. . . .
It will not be an easy matter to bring the American States to act
AMERICAN COMMERCE AND COMMERCIAL POLICY 187
as a nation; they are not to be feared as such by us. It must be a
long time before they can engage, or will concur in any material
expence. A Stamp act, a Tea act, or such act that never can again
occur, could alone unite them; their climate, their staples, their
manners, are different; their interests opposite; and that which is
beneficial to one is destructive to the other. In short, every circum-
stance proves that it will be extreme folly to enter into any engage-
ments, by which we may not wish to be bound hereafter. It is
impossible to name any material advantage the American States will,
or can give us in return, more than what we of course shall have.
No treaty can be made with the American States that can be binding
on the whole of them. The act of Confederation does not enable
Congress to form more than general treaties: at the moment of the
highest authority of Congress the power in question was withheld
by the several States. No treaty that could be made would suit the
different interests. When treaties are necessary, they must be made
with the States separately. Each State has reserved every power
relative to imports, exports, prohibitions, duties, &c., to itself. But
no treaty at present is necessary.
B. Why England would not make a Commercial Treaty, lySj ^
One of the greatest weaknesses of the Confederation was the reservation by the
several states of all the important powers over finance, foreign relations, and similar
subjects. Consequently the Congress of the Confederation was unable to levy
taxes or to make treaties without first securing the consent of all the states. " We
are one nation today, and thirteen tomorrow," said Washington; "who will treat
with us on those terms?" Whether the ostensible reason urged by the Duke of
Dorset was the real one or not, the fact remained that England refused to negotiate
a commercial treaty with us.
Paris, March 26, 1785.
Gentlemen,
Having communicated to my Court the readiness you expressed
in your letter to me of the gth of December, to remove to London,
for the purpose of treating upon such points as may materially con-
cern the interests, both political and commercial, of Great Britain
and America; and having, at the same time, represented that you
declared yourselves to be fully authorized and empowered to nego-
tiate, I have been, in answer thereto, instructed to learn from you,
^ Letter from the Duke of Dorset to the American Commissioners. Diplomatic
Correspondence of the United States of America, 1783-9 (Washington, 1837), I,
574-5-
i88 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
gentlemen, what is the real nature of the powers with which you are
invested, whether you are merely commissioned by Congress, or
whether you have received separate powers from the respective
States. A committee of North American merchants have waited
upon his Majesty's principal Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs,
to express how anxiously they wished to be informed upon this sub-
ject, repeated experience having taught them in particular, as well
as the public in general, how little the authority of Congress could
avail in any respect, where the interests of any one individual State
was even concerned, and particularly so where the concerns of that
particular State might be supposed to militate against such resolu-
tions as Congress might think proper to adopt.
The apparent determination of the respective States to regulate
their own separate interests, renders it absolutely necessary towards
forming a permanent system of commerce, that my Court should be
informed how far the Commissioners can be duly authorized to
enter into any engagements with Great Britain, which it may not
be in the power of any one of the States to render totally fruitless and
ineffectual.
I have the honor to be, &c., Dorset
C. British Merchants sure of the American Market, lyyd ^
While Dean Tucker was very bitter against the colonists for rebelling against
the mother country, he urged the people of England to accept separation philosophi-
cally, as they would lose nothing in the way of trade. The long credit secured by
Americans from English merchants would always lead them, he argued, to prefer
British goods to those of any other country.
Answer 5. The Trade of Great-Britain with the Colonies rests
on a much firmer Foundation than that of a nominal Subjection by
Means of Paper Laws and imaginary Restrictions: — A Foundation
so very obvious, as well as secure, that it is surprising it hath not
been taken Notice of in this Dispute. The Foundation, I mean,
b, the Superiority of the British Capitals over those of every other
Country in the Universe. As a signal Proof of this, let it be observed,
that the British Exporter gives long Credit to almost every Country,
to which he sends his Goods; but more especially he used to do so
to North- America: Yet when he imports from other Countries, he
receives no Credit. On the Contrary, his general Custom is, either
* A StHet of Amwers to Certain Objections against Separation from the Rebellious
Cthititt. By Joriah Tucker (Glocester, 17/6), 30-1.
I
AMERICAN COMMERCE AND COMMERCIAL POLICY 189
to advance Money beforehand, or at least to pay for the Goods as
soon as they arrive. Hence therefore it comes to pass, that the Trade
of the World is carried on, in a great Measure, by British Capitals;
and whilst this Superiority shall last, it is morally impossible that the
Trade of the British Nation can suffer any very great or alarming
Diminution. Now the North- Americans, who enjoyed this Advan-
tage to a greater Degree than any others, by purchasing Goods of
us at long Credit, and then selling the same Goods to the Spaniards
for ready Money, will find by Experience, that in quarrelling with
the English, they have quarrelled with their best Friends. Let them
therefore go wherever they please, and try all the Nations on the
Globe. When they have done, they will suppliantly return to
Great-Britain, and entreat to be admitted into the Number of our
Customers, not for ours, but for their own Sakes.
D. Advantages of the English Market to Americans, lySj ^
Writing several years after Dean Tucker, Lord Sheffield used the same argument
against making a commercial treaty with the United States, namely that the superior
credit facilities they enjoyed in England would bring them to that market in prefer- '
ence to any other. Other reasons were also given, such as the abiUty to secure best
in London an assorted general cargo. As a matter of fact American trade returned
generally into the old channels after the war and was carried on chiefly with England.
At least four-fifths of the importations from Europe into the
American States, were at all times made upon credit; and undoubtedly
the States are in greater want of credit at this time than at former
periods. It can be had only in Great Britain.^ The French who
gave them credit, are all bankrupts: French merchants cannot give
much credit. The Dutch in general have not trusted them to any
amount; those who did have suffered; and it is not the custom of
the Dutch to give credit, but on the best security. It is therefore
obvious from this and the foregoing state of imports and exports,
into what channels the commerce of the American States must in-
^ Observations on the Commerce of the American States. By Lord John Sheffield
(2d edition, London, 1784), 200-7, 263-4, 272.
2 This credit was so extensive, and so stretched beyond aU proper bounds, as
to threaten the ruin of every British merchant trading to America in the year 1772.
The long credit given to America, the difficulty of recovering debts (which from the
feebleness of the new governments, must become still more difficult) greatly preju-
diced our trade with that country, and made bankrupts of almost three-fourths of
the merchants of London trading to America, particularly to Virginia and Maryland.
It is said that more goods have been sent to America in 1783 than that country
could possibly pay for in three years.
I90 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
evitably flow, and that nearly four-fifths of their importations ^ will
be from Great Britain directly. Where articles are nearly equal, the
superior credit afforded by England will always give the preference.
The American will, doubtless, attempt to persuade the British
merchant to be his security with foreigners; but it is certain many
foreign articles will go to America through Great Britain, as formerly,
on account of the difficulty the American merchant would find in
resorting to every quarter of the world to collect a cargo. The Ameri-
cans send ships to be loaded with all sorts of European goods. A
general cargo for the American market cannot be made up on such
advantageous terms in any part of the world as in England. In
our ports, all articles may be got with dispatch — a most winning cir-
cumstance in trade; but wherever they carry fish, and those articles
for which England cannot be the entrepot, they will take back wine,
silk, oil, &c. from Spain and Portugal, and the Mediterranean. ^ But
* Notwithstanding the resolves of Congress, and all the disadvantages arising
from the war, British manufactures, to a vast amount, had the preference, and in
great part supplied .\merica, though burdened ^vith double freight, double port
charges and commission, and a circuitous voyage through a neutral port. Besides,
what went to the Americans through Halifax, New York, South Carolina and
Georgia, many ships which cleared for New York and HaUfax at the ports of London,
Bristol, Liverpool, Scotland, and Ireland, went at great risque, and in the face of
act of Congress, directly to North America. . . . These facts being notorious,
can it be supposed, our manufactures being so much better, so much cheaper, and
so much more suitable, as to support themselves against all these disadvantages
in war, that they vN-ill not occupy the American markets in peace? And no small
advantage may arise to this country from the distrust the French and Americans
have of each other in commercial matters. The French fearing to consign their
goods to Americans, sent out factors; while the latter, equally jealous, sent their
own people to transact their business in France, where several houses were estab-
lished during the war, which since the peace are settled or settling in England.
American agents were also in Holland to Uttle advantage.
The Americans must seek the commerce of Britain, because our manufactures
are most suitable. Few trading Americans speak any foreign language; they are
acquainted with our laws as well as with our language. They will put a confidence
in British merchants, which they will not in those of other nations, with whose people ~
they are unacquainted, as well as with their laws and language. They have im-
pressions of the arbitrary procecnlings of the French; they will recollect, that whei
they went to the French islands, they were not permitted to sell the provisions
kc, they had imjxjrteti, until the French merchants had sold all theirs; that thi
French took their gixKis at what price they please<l, and charged them as thej
thought pro|)cr for their own.
« It I* not probable the .American States will have a very free trade in the Med*:
itcrranean; it will not be the interest of any of the great maritime powers to protec
them there from the Barbary States. If they know their interests, they will not]
encourage the Americans to be carriers. That the Barbary States are advantageoi
AMERICAN COMMERCE AND COMMERCIAL POLICY 191
if we maintain the carrying trade, half the commerce of the American
States, or less than half, without the expence of their government and
protection, and without the extravagance of bounties, would be
infinitely better for us than the monopoly, such as it was. . . .
What was foretold in the first edition of this work, has now [1784]
actually happened. Every account from America says, that British
manufactures are selling at a considerable profit, while other European
goods cannot obtain the first cost. Every day's experience shews,
that this country, from the nature and quality of its manufactures,
and from the ascendancy it has acquired in commerce, will command
three-fourths of the American trade. The American merchants so-
licit a correspondence, and beg for credit, because, while they feel
their own want of capital, they know that our traders are more liberal,
and our goods cheaper and better, than any in Europe. And the
only danger is, not that the American merchants will ask for too few
manufactures, but that they will obtain too many. The American
consumers have been impoverished by an expensive war, which has
bequeathed them many taxes to pay; and they will not be more
punctual in their remittances at a time when they are associating
against the payment of old debts. It may be for our interest to run
some hazard, however, at the renewal of our correspondence, by
accepting a trade which is pressed upon us by willing customers.
But how far it may be prudent for the British merchant to comply
with orders, till the several States hold out some regulations, that
will give them security, is a question. . . .
It is well known, that numbers of our merchants have been made
bankrupts through the bad payment of the Americans.
E. Trade between England and the United States, ijS4-iygo ^
That Dean Tucker and Lord Sheffield were right in saying that the political
separation of the colonies from the mother country and the refusal on the part of
England to negotiate a commercial treaty with the United States would not materi-
to the maritime powers is certain. If they were suppressed the little States of Italy
&c. would have much more of the carrying trade. . . . The Americans cannot
protect themselves from the latter; they cannot pretend to a navy. In war, New
England may have privateers, but they will be much fewer than they have been;
they will be few indeed, if we do not give up the Navigation Act. The best informed
say, not less than three-fourths of the crews of the American privateers, during the
late war, were Europeans.
^ A Statistical View of the Commerce of the United States of A merica. By Timothy
Pitkin (2d edition, New York, 181 7), 30.
192 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
ally affect the trade between the two countries, is proved by the table here given.
After peace was declared trade was renewed on an even larger scale. One result
of this was to show that political control was not necessary to secure the trade of a
country.
The following is an account of the imports into England from the
United States, and exports to the United States from that country
in sterling money, from 1784 to 1790, taken from the English cus-
tomhouse books — viz.
Years Imports Exports
1784 £ 749,345 £3,679,467
'1785 893,594 2,308,023
1786 843,119 1,603,465
1787 893,637 2,009,111
1788 1,023,789 1,886,142
1789 1,050,198 2,525,298
1790 1,191,071 3,431,778
II. Effects of the Failure to Negotiate a Commercial Treaty
A. Trade between the West Indies and North America before 1774 *
One of the most lucrative and mutually advantageous branches of trade carried
on by the colonists was that with the West Indies. To the planters in those islands
it was absolutely essential, while to the American colonies it was less vital but not
leas profitable. After American independence was acknowledged trade between the
North American states and the English West Indies was of course impossible under
the navigation acts, which permitted colonial trade to be carried on only in British
ships. The impossibility of renewing this trade had disastrous consequences.
Edwards was governor of Jamaica and wrote a very valuable book on the West
Indifs.
It may, I think, be affirmed, without hazard of contradiction, that
if ever there was any one particular branch of commerce in the world,
that called less for restraint and limitation than any other, it was the
trade which, previous to the year 1774, was carried on between the
planters of the West Indies and the inhabitants of North America.
It was not a traffick calculated to answer the fantastick calls of vanity,
or to administer gratification to Itixury or vice; but to procure food
for the hungry, and to furnish materials (scarce less important than
food) for supplying the planters in two capital objects, their buildings,
and packages for their chief staple productions, sugar, and rum. Of
the necessity they were under on the latter account, an idea may be
» The History, Civil and Commercial, of the British Colonies in the West
Indies. By Bryan Edwards (4th edition, London, 1807), II, 485-6.
AMERICAN COMMERCE AND COMMERCIAL POLICY 193
formed from the statement in the preceding chapter of the importation
of those commodities into Great Britain; the cultivation of which
must absolutely have stopped without the means of conveying them
to market.
For the supply of those essential articles, lumber, fish, flour, and
grain, America seems to have been happily fitted, as well from
internal circumstances, as her commodious situation; and it is to a
neighbourly intercourse with that continent, continued during one
hundred and thirty years, that our sugar plantations in a great measure
owe their prosperity. ...
B. The West Indies should not be Opened to American Trader lySj
It was proposed by Pitt to open the West Indies to trade with the American
states, and against this Lord Sheffield argued warmly, urging that all necessary
supplies could be furnished by Nova Scotia, by Ireland, and by England.
It should seem, that there must be some other object in reserve,
which is not yet acknowledged, besides the cheapness of lumber
and provisions, and a market for rum, to account for the eagerness,
which some express, for opening the navigation of the West Indies.
The assertion, that our islands must starve if they are not opened
to American shipping, is a curious instance of the slight ground on
which men will be clamorous: ... If our islands are so helpless,
and would rather sacrifice our marine than make so small an effort
as to fit our vessels in addition to those of Bermuda, and our remain-
ing colonies, sufficient to supply themselves with provisions and
lumber, they deserve to suffer or to pay an extraordinary price.
C. American Vessels should be Admitted to Trade with the West Indies,
In reply to Lord Sheffield's arguments many rejoinders were written, from one
of which a brief extract may be given. In this it was urged that Great Britain would
profit most by the proposed arrangement.
It is expedient however to examine still more fully, what the
grand leading argument that Lord Sheffield adduces in favour of
the necessity of totally excluding them from a participation in the
^ Observations on the Commerce of the American States. By Lord John Sheffield
(2d edition, London, 1784), 146-7,
^ A Letter from an American . . . on Lord Sheffield's Pamphlet. . . . Said to
be written by William Bingham (Philadelphia, 1784), lo-ii.
194 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
British West India trade, amounts to. He is fearful that they will
thereby become the carriers of the produce of the islands to the
place of its consumption, which will create an interference of foreign
vessels, thereby lessening the number of seamen, and consequently
the naval force of the country.
But, if in addition to all that I have already said, I answer, that
in return for this accommodation which he may call indulgent, but
which I have clearly evinced to be the interest of Great Britain,
consulting the welfare of her islands, to grant.
I say, if in return for this accommodation, her subjects may
be admitted to a free ingress and egress to and from the ports of the
United States — What reply will the advocates for this system
make? — What will become of Lord Sheffield's reasoning, when
weighed in the scale of comparative proportion? I only wish them to
comprehend the magnitude of the advantage. Men of weak or
limited understandings, will be incapable of extending their ideas,
so as to embrace the vast field it opens to an enlightened mind.
In the first place, they will not assuredly deny, that the produc-
tions of the United States, to the transportation of which, from the
proposed arrangement, they are freely to be admitted, will furnish
twice the quantity of bulky materials, that the exports of the West
Indies do, and will consequently employ twice the quantity of ship-
ping.— To stamp conviction in regard to the truth of this assertion,
let them take a view of the rice, indigo, and lumber of Georgia and
South Carolina; — the naval stores, lumber, and tobacco of North
Carolina; — the tobacco, wheat, Indian corn, &c. of Virginia and
Maryland; — the flour, lumber, corn, and various provisions of
Pennsylvania, Delaware, Jersey and New- York; — the fish, lumber,
live stock, &c. of the New England States.
I ) . Efecis of the Prohibition of Trade between the West Indies and
United States, ly 80-1 78"/ ^ ^
In 1 783 Parliament passed an act excluding American vessels from trade wifl
the British West Indies. As a result of the stoppage of this trade the accu?!- —^
supplies of fish, breadstuffs, meat, etc., from America, were cut off, and thoi:
of persons on the islands actually died of starvation. These disastrous rum
are vividly portrayed by Governor Edwards.
On the 2d July 1783 the importation into the British West Indie
of every species of naval stores, staves, and lumber, live $tock, flour,
» The History, Civil and Commercial, of the British Colonies in the West Indies
By Bryan Edwards (4th edition, London, 1807), II, 495-515, passim.
AMERICAN COMMERCE AND COMMERCIAL POLICY 195
and grain of all kinds, the growth of the American states, was con-
fined to British ships legally navigated; and the export to those
states of West Indian productions, was made subject to the same
restriction; while many necessary articles (as salted beef and pork,
fish, and train-oil) formerly supplied by America, were prohibited
altogether, it was considered as a measure merely temporary and
experimental; and until a plan of permanent regulation should be
agreed to by both countries, it was thought neither impolitick nor
unjust, that Great Britain should reserve in her own hands the power
of restraining or relaxing her system of commercial arrangements, as
circumstances might arise to render the exercise of such a power
prudent and necessary.
In these reasons the West Indian merchants, and such of the
planters as were resident in Great Britain, acquiesced; but on the
first meeting of a new parliament, in May, 1784, (another change
having taken place in the mean time in the British administration) ^
the business of a commercial intercourse between the West Indies
and the States of America, pressed itself on the attention of govern-
ment with a force which was not to be resisted. Petitions, com-
plaints, and remonstrances, were poured in from every island in the
West Indies. Some of the petitioners represented that they had not
six weeks provisions in store, and all of them anticipated the most
dreadful consequences, if the system of restriction should be much
longer persisted in; expecting nothing less than a general revolt
of their slaves, in the apprehension of perishing of hunger. . . .
On the whole, the lords of the committee strongly recommended
a strict and rigid adherence to the measure of confining the inter-
course between our West Indian islands and America, to British
ships only, as a regulation of absolute necessity; considering any
deviation from it, as exposing the commerce and navigation of Great
Britain to the rivalry of revolted subjects, now become ill-affected
aliens. . . .
These doctrines and opinions of the lords of the committee of
council were unfortunately approved and adopted in their fullest
extent by the British government; ...
But there was this misfortune attending the sugar planters, that
their wants were immediate; and of a complexion affecting not only
^ The Right Honourable William Pitt, who had been Chancellor of the Ex-
chequer from loth July, 1782, to 5th April, 1783, was reappointed to that office,
and also nominated First Lord of the Treasury, on the 27th of December, 1783,
soon after which the parliament was dissolved.
196 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
property, but life. Whatever resources might ultimately be found in
the opiilence and faculties of the mother-country, it was impossible,
in the nature of things, to expect from so distant a quarter an ade-
quate supply to a vast and various demand, coming suddenly and
unexpectedly. Many of the sugar islands too had suffered dread-
fully under two tremendous hurricanes, in 1780 and 1781, in conse-
quence whereof (had it not been for the casual assistance obtained
from prize-vessels) one-half of their negroes must absolutely have
perished of hunger. Should similar visitations occur, the most
dreadful apprehensions would be realized; and I am sorry to add,
that realized they were/
I have now before me a report of the committee of the assembly
of Jamaica, on the subject of the slave trade, wherein the loss of
negroes in that island, in consequence of those awful concussions
of nature, and the want of supplies from America, is incidentally
stated. . . .
**We shall now (say the committee) point out the principal causes
to which this mortality of our slaves is justly chargeable. It is
but too well known to the house, that in the several years 1780,
1 78 1, 1784, 1785, and 1786, it pleased Divine Providence to visit
this island with repeated hurricanes, which spread desolation through-
out most parts of the island; . . .
''We decline to enlarge on the consequences which followed lest
we may appear to exaggerate; but having endeavoured to compute,
with as much accuracy as the subject will admit, the number of our
slaves whose destruction may be fairly attributed to these repeated
calamities, and the unfortunate measure of interdicting foreign sup-
plies, and for this purpose compared the imports and returns of ne-
groes for the last seven years, with those of seven years preceding,
we hesitate not, after every allowance for adventitious causes, to fix
the whole loss at fifteen thousand: this number we firmly believe
TO HAVE PERISHED OF FAMINE, OR OF DISEASES CONTRACTED BY SCANTY
AhTD UNWHOLESOME DIET, BETWEEN THE LATTER END OF 1780, AND
THE BEGINNING OF 1 787."
Such (without including the loss of negroes in the other islands,
and the consequent diminution in their cultivation and returns) was
the price at which Great Britain thought proper to retain her ex-
clusive right of supplying her sugar islands with food and neces-
saries!
AMERICAN COMMERCE AND COMMERCIAL POLICY 197
III. Economic Reasons for the Constitution
A. Commercial DifficulHes Led to Constitution, iy8j-iy8p ^
Under the ineffective Confederation no common legislation on commercial
matters was possible, and the conflicting commercial and tariff legislation of the
different states led inevitably to a demand for a stronger central government
which could deal with these matters as a whole. Seybert was a Philadelphia
physician and at one time a member of Congress.
During the war of the revolution, our commerce was suspended;
after the peace, in 1783, our trade continued to languish; it had to
contend with domestic and foreign obstacles; foreign nations enter-
tained a jealousy concerning these states; at home a rivalship was
prevalent amongst the several members of the confederacy, and
checked the prosperity of the nation, f Each of the thirteen inde-
pendent sovereignties, contemplated its own intermediate interests;
some of the states declared the commercial intercourse with them, to
be equally free to all nations, and they cautiously avoided to lay
duties on such merchandise as was subject to them, when imported
into other states. To provide a fund to discharge the public debt,
and to pay the arrears due to the soldiers who fought the battles of
the revolution, it was proposed in Congress, during the operation of
the articles of Confederation, to lay a duty of five per centum ad
valorem, on foreign merchandise imported into the United States;
the opposition of the state of Rhode Island, was, of itself, adequate
to defeat this plan.^ When the state of Pennsylvania laid a duty
on foreign merchandise imported, the state of New- Jersey, equally
washed by the waters of the Delaware River, admitted the same
articles free of duty: they could easily be smuggled into one state
from the other. The several states laid different rates of duty on
foreign tonnage: in some one shilling sterling per ton was imposed on
"-^V^^sels, which in other states paid three shillings sterling per ton.
Such was the misunderstanding amongst the several states; there
were no general commercial regulations for them, nor could the Con-
gress enforce any, unless they were adopted by every member of the
federation; the opposition of any one of the states, could prevent
the passage of any act on the subject.
* Statistical Annals . . . of the United States. By Adam Seybert (Philadelphia,
1818), 57-9.
2 Proceedings of Congress, i8th April, 1783.
198 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
Other nations were well disposed to take advantage of our domes-
tic embarrassments. Very soon after the conclusion of the American
war, Great Britain was not alone opposed to our commercial prosperity:
France and Spain were equally jealous of it; we were by these nation>
considered as their rival, possessed of the means and>he character
to dispute the benefits arising from navigation, '^ur intercourse
with all these nations, was placed under restrictions; their con-
nection with us was measured by the scale of interest. After France
and Spain had become parties to our revolutionary war, they con-
sented to admit foreign vessels into their West India ports, whereby
they were enabled to man their fleets, and to obtain subsistence for
the inhabitants. Immediately after the preliminaries of the peace
were signed, in 1783, these nations abridged, and very soon thereafter,
abolished the privileges, they had granted to foreigners inJJiis branch
of their trade. By an arret of the 30th of August, 1 784, foreign vessels,
of more than sixty tons, were not permittee! to enter the ports of the
French West Indies; the merchandise that was allowed to be entered,
was enumerated and very limited; it consisted principallv/f articles
of first necessity, and in return for the American cargoes, molasses,
rum, and such merchandise as had been imported from France could
only be taken away.^ Recently the same system of restrictions has
been again adopted.^
Soon after the peace, in 1783, the United States offered to enter
into treaties of commerce with Great Britain, France, Spain and
Portugal;' all our overtures were, under various pretexts, rejected.
Surrounded by difficulties, it became a paramount duty to cut
the palsy which afflicted us at home. It was manifest, that genei
regulations were essential to the safety and welfare of the Union;
was absolutely necessary, that the power to regulate and control 01
intercourse with foreign nations, should be confided to Congre
alone; and it was that conviction, which, principally, induced
people of the United States, to call the convention to re\ise thi
articles of the confederation.
By the Constitution of the United States, Congress has power
"To regulate commerce with foreign nations, and among th
several states, and within the Indian tribes."
" No tax or duty shall be laid on articles exported from any statf
no preference shall be given, by any regulation of commerce or reveniM
* Maq>hergon, loc. cit., vol. iv., pp. 55 and 56.
« Decree of the governor of Martinique, dated 14th March, 1816.
• Manhairs Life 0/ Washington, vol. v., p. 182, et seq.
AMERICAN COMMERCE AND COMMERCIAL POLICY 199
to the ports of one state over that of another; nor shall vessels,
bound to or from one state, be obliged to enter, clear or pay duties
in another."
"No state shall, without the consent of Congress, lay any impost
or duties on imports or exports, except what may be absolutely neces-
sary for executing its inspection laws; and the net produce of all
duties and imposts, laid by any state, on imports or exports, shall be
for the use of the Treasury of the United States, and all such laws
shall be subject to the revision and control of Congress." ^
The adoption of our present constitution, stamped upon us the
characters of a nation; that instrument secured domestic tranquillity,
and paved the way for amicable relations with foreign powers: at
home it was succeeded by general prosperity; abroad, it gained
for us the respect of foreign powers. . . .
B. Economic Reasons in Favor of the Constitution , ijSj ^
The moneyed men, the creditors, and those in general who wished stability and
order introduced into the government, favored the adoption of the Constitution.
Hamilton, who wrote and labored earnestly for the new Constitution, states the
situation clearly.
The new Constitution has in favour of its success these circum-
stances. A very great weight of influence of the persons who framed
it, particularly in the universal popularity of General Washington.
The good- will of the commercial interest throughout the States,
which will give all its efforts to the establishment of a government
capable of regulating, protecting, and extending the commerce of
the Union. The good- will of most men of property in the several
States, who wish a government of the Union able to protect them
against domestic violence, and the depredations which the demo-
cratic spirit is apt to make on property, and who are besides anxious
for the respectability of the nation. The hopes of the creditors of
the United States, that a general government possessing the means
of doing it, will pay the debt of the Union. A strong belief in the
people at large in the insufficiency of the present Confederation to
preserve the existence of the Union, and of the necessity of the Union
to their safety and prosperity; of course, a strong desire of a change,
and a predisposition to receive well the propositions of the convention.
^ Constitution of the United States, Art. I., Sees, viii, ix, x.
• • 2 Works of Alexander Hamilton. Edited by H. C. Lodge (New York, 1885-6),
I, 400-2.
200 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
Against its success is to be put the dissent of two or three important
men in the convention, who will think their characters pledged to
defeat the plan ; the influence of many inconsiderable men In possession
of considerable offices under the State governments, who will fear
a diminution of their consequence, power, and emolument, by th(
establishment of the general government, and who can hope for
nothing there; the influence of some considerable men in office, possessed
of talents and popularity, who, partly from the same motives, and
partly from a desire of playing a part in a convulsion for their own
aggrandizement, will oppose the quiet adoption of the new government
(some considerable men out of office, from motives of ambition, ma\
be disposed to act the same part) . Add to these causes the disinclina-
tion of the people to taxes, and of course to a strong government;
the opposition of all men much in debt, who will not wish to see a
government established, one object of which is to restrain the means
of cheating creditors; the democratical jealousy of the people, which
may be alarmed at the appearance of institutions that may seem
calculated to place the power of the community in few hands, an(
to raise a few individuals to stations of great pre-eminence; and thr
influence of some foreign powers, who, from different motives, will
not wish to see an energetic government established throughout
the States.
IV. Expansion of American Commerce
A. Commerce more profitable than Manufactures , lySy ^
The reasons which had led to the expansion of colonial commerce were still
operative after the Revolution, and commerce remained more profitable thai
manufactures for another twenty years. This, next to agriculture, formed th(
most lucrative occupation in the states. Brissot deAVarville was a Frenchman oi
liberal views who lived and traveled in this country for a couple of years.
Some writers, among whom are found the celebrated Dr. Price
and the Abb6 Mably, have exhorted the independent Americans.
if not to exclude exterior commerce entirely from their ports, at
least to keep it within very contracted bounds. They pretend, that
the ruin of republicanism in the United States can happen only fron
exterior commerce; because by great quantities of articles of lu.\ur\
and a frivolous taste, that commerce would corrupt their morals
and without pure morals a republic cannot exist.
» The Commerce of America with Europe. By J. P. Brissot de War\ ill.- anc
Etknoe CUvihre (London, 1794), 64-6, 74-9.
AMERICAN COMMERCE AND COMMERCIAL POLICY 201
''Alas! What can the United States import from Europe, con-
tinues Dr. Price, except it be infection? I avow it, cries the Doctor,
I tremble in thinking on the furor for exterior commerce, which is
apparently going to turn the heads of the Americans. Every nation
spreads nets around the United States, and caresses them, in order
to gain a preference; but their interest cautions them to beware
of these seductions." ^
I am far from contradicting, in its basis, the opinion of these
politicians. Moreover, I think, with Dr. Price, that the United
States will one day be able to produce every thing necessary and
convenient, but I am also of the opinion, that these two writers
have considered the independent Americans in a false point of view;
that they have not sufficiently observed the state of their circum-
stances; in fine, that their circumstances and actual wants oblige them
to have recourse to foreign commerce. This is a truth which I propose
to demonstrate; for I will prove that the independent Americans
are in want of the necessaries and conveniences of life, and in some
states, of luxuries, and that their habits and nature, added to other
circumstances, will always prevent their renouncing them entirely.
I will prove, that having no manufactures, they cannot them-
selves supply these wants, and that they can have no manufactures
for a long time to come.
That although they already possessed them, they ought to prefer
to national ones those of exterior commerce, and that they should
rather invite Europeans to their ports than frequent those of the
European states.
Finally, that by the same reason that makes it impossible to
exclude exterior commerce, in case of wants which alone it can sup-
ply, it is equally so to fix its boundaries. . . .
... All is reduced to two words; America has wants, and
Europe has manufactures. . . .
But, if they had raw materials in plenty, they ought to be advised
not to establish manufactures; or, to speak more justly, manufactures
could not be established; the nature of things ordains it so. . . .
Besides there will be, for a considerable time to come, more to
^ Price's Observations, page 76. See the Abb6 Mably, what he says of these
observations, from page 146 to page 163. See also what the Comte de Mirabeau
has added to the Observations of Dr. Price, in his Reflections printed at the end of
his translation of this work, page 319. London edition, 1785.
He has, as a severe philosopher, treated on exterior commerce, and made ab-
straction of the actual situation of the Americans.
202 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
be gained in the United States, by the earth, which yields abundant!}
than by manufactures — and man places himself in that situation
where the greatest and most speedy gain is to be acquired.
As the population must, for many ages, be disproportioned to the
extent of the United States, land will be cheap there during the
same length of time, and consequently the inhabitants will for a long
time be cultivators.
B. The Trade with the Orient, 1784-1800 ^
The enforcement of the navigation acts by England against the United States,
which resulted in closing the West Indies to the latter and depriving them of the
carrying trade to England, forced American ship>owners to seek otha^' markets.
There followed after the Revolution one of the most adventurous ajid dramatic
periods of expansion of our foreign trade. Pitkin was a member o^ the House of
Representatives from Connecticut. '^
The trade of the United States with China commenced soon
after the close of the revolutionary war. The first American vessel
that went on a trading voyage to China, sailed from the port of New
York, on the 2 2d day of February 1784, and returned on the nth
of May 1785. She was three hundred and sixty tons burthen, com-
manded by Captain John Green, and Samuel Shaw, Esq., agent
for the owners. The Americans were well received by the Chinese
government, and since that time, our trade with China has greatly
increased.
In 1789, there were fifteen American vessels at Canton, being
a greater number, than from any other nation, except Great-Britain.
For many years, we have imported more Chinese goods, than wer<
wanted for our consumption, and which we have again exported t(
other countries. The principal articles imported are teas, silks, nan
keens, and China ware. Of these, tea is of the greatest value. '
quantity of this article, imported and consumed within the I 1
States, has increased with the increase of population. . . .
The value of goods paying duties ad valorem, which incliulc
nankeens, all silk and cotton goods, and China ware, imported ii
1797, from China and the East-Indies generally, but principally fron
the former, amounted to $922,161. The average value of good^
paying the same duties, from China and other native Asiatic power^
during the years 1802, 1803, and 1804, was about two millions thret
hundred thousand dollars. ...
* A StaUslkal View of the Commerce of the United States of A merica. By Timoth)
Pitkin (ad edition, New York, 181 7^, 246-9, passim.
AMERICAN COMMERCE AND COMMERCIAL POLICY 2f3
The balance of trade with China, as it appears on the custom-
house books, is much against the United States; as few articles,
either domestic or foreign, are shipped directly from the United
States to that country. The payments for Chinese goods have
been generally made in specie, the exportation of which is not
entered at the custom-house, or in seal-skins taken in the South-Seas,
and furs procured on the North- West Coast of America, and carried
from those places, directly to China, without being brought to the
United States. The amount of specie exported to China, it is difficult
to ascertain with precision. . . . The great prices obtained at Canton,
for furs procured on the North-West Coast of America, by those
who were with Captain Cook, in his last voyage of discovery, induced
others to engage in this trade. The enterprize of the Americans led
them very early to engage in these long and hazardous trading voyages.
The first of the kind, undertaken from the United States, was from
Boston in 1788, in a ship commanded by captain Kendrick. This
trade, at first, afforded great profits, to the concerned, and it has,
ever since the year 1788, been carried on from the United States, to a
considerable extent, and with greater or less profit.
C. The Coasting Trade, lygi ^
Not merely was foreign trade developing, but the coastwise trade and fisheries
were also growing. As long, however, as America depended upon Europe for her
manufactured goods and upon China and the East and West Indies for her luxuries,
the value and extent of the foreign trade were bound to exceed the coastwise trade.
The coasting trade has become very great, and the derangement
of the West-India trade must extend it exceedingly, during the cur-
rent year, from the failure of melasses. The increase of manufactures,
and foreign restrictions on other branches of trade, have contributed
to elevate this valuable part of our commerce; and the former will
continue steadily to increase the importance of the coasting business.
The vessels which take supplies of flour, and many other articles,
from the middle and northern states to South-Carolina and Georgia,
make very frequent voyages, and they return less than half laden:
but if the planters should pursue the cultivation of hemp, flax, hops,
and cotton, they may come back with full cargoes. A similar re-
mark may be justly made in regard to the other states.
^ A View of the United States of America. By Tench Coxe (Philadelphia, 1794),
340-1.
204 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
The fisheries would appear not to have recovered their former
value; but it is plain, they have increased yearly since 1789: and they
are even now more valuable than they appear to be. The consumption
of oil, whale-bone, skins of sea animals, spermaceti, and pickled and
dried fish, is much greater in the United States at this time, than it
was twenty years ago. The outfits of the fishing vessels, too, are
more from the industry and resources of the country, than was for-
merly the case. Wherefore the general benefits resulting from the
fisheries are probably not less than before the revolution.
D. Shipbuilding in the United States ^ iy8j-iy8g *
Phineas Bond was a Loyalist who went to England at the time of the Revolu-
tion, and was later appointed British Consul at Philadelphia, which post he filled
for many years. The following extract is taken from a report to the foreign office
of Britain in 1 789. It will be noticed that he is very pessimistic as to the prospects
of American shipping.
The account I transmit to your Grace (No. 31) of the number of
ships now building is very accurate as to the 5 middle states which
compose my district, what relates to other states I have collected
from the opinions and observations of persons upon whom I could
rely: — For a short time subsequent to the Peace, my Lord, ship-
building went on rapidly in the Eastern and Middle States of America
— but the restrictions upon the commerce of the country soon dis-
couraged the merchants and the ship builders found themsehes
without employment. In Philad* where this business was carried
on formerly to a prodigious extent, a very small proportion of the
ship yards are even now occupied — and for a long time ships were
so little in demand that some have been on the stocks 2 or 3 years
without a purchaser — others were roofed in to secure them against
the weather and in one instance a small vessel actually rotted upon
the stocks: — the natural consequence of these discouragements was
that the journeymen left or were dismissed from their employ and
resorted to Nova Scotia and other parts of the King's dominions
where they could earn their bread. The ship wrights for the most
part became reduced and their stock of timber being once exhausted,
they had no means of replacing it. — Within the last twelve months,
my Lord, a combination of circumstances have prevailed to give some
sort of relief to the artificers who were j^ossessed of means to pursue
• LctUrs of Phinras Bond. In Annual Refwrt of the American Historical Asso-
ciation (Washingtun, 1897), I, 638-9.
AMERICAN COMMERCE AND COMMERCIAL POLICY 205
their trades: — The prospect of an efficient government — the scarcity
in Europe — large crops in America — the actual want of vessels
to carry off the produce of the last year, all operated favorably, the
extension of the China trade also had its effect, and we may throw
into the scale, the discrimination made by the late Federal impost
laws (No. i), by which a discount of 10% is allowed upon the duties
on goods and merchandize imported in vessels owned by the citizens
of America — All these matters have lately drawn forth some exer-
tions in the matter of ship building — the number of vessels now on
the stocks seem in a train of being brought forward as fast as the
scanty resources of the ship builders and th^ reduced number of hands
will admit, these are not soon or easily supplied so let the encourage-
ment be what it may years must elapse before this useful employment
will approach the conditions of profit and consequence it enjoyed
antecedent to the war — nor is it at all improbable that a reduction
of the prices of flour and wheat in Europe would at once check the
present exertion and cause many of the vessels now on the stocks to
be left dead weight upon the hands of the ship builders: — From all
I have observed or can collect my opinion is that the general
tonnage of the United States does not increase, but that the tonnage
of New Hampshire, Mass. Bay, PennsyP and Maryland has of late
advanced and is now advancing in some degree and that the advance
is the effect of adventitious circumstances, which may or may not
continue: — In short, my Lord whatever tends to encourage the
commerce of the country, will enlarge the tonnage of the country
and whatever has a contrary operation will produce a contrary effect.
E. Comparative Cost of American and French Ships, ijgi^
Owing to the wealth of the forest resources, an American ship could be built
for about $34 a ton, while both in England and on the continent, the cost was at
least fifty per cent higher. Coxe was well qualified to speak on this subject, and
his estimate may be accepted as correct.
The french-built ships cost from 55 to 60 dollars per ton, when
fitted to receive a cargo, exclusively of sea stores, insurance, the
charges of lading, outward pilotage, and other expenses incidental
to the employment, and not to the building and outfit of a vessel.
The american live oak and cedar ships, to which none are superior,
cost in the same situation, from 33 to 35 dollars, finished very com-
pletely.
^ A View of the United States of America. By Tench Coxe (Philadelphia, 1794),
184.
2o6
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
F. Comparative Cost of Operation of American and English Vessels^
1803 '
Not merely in (X)st of construction, but also in cost of operation did an American
vessel have the advantage over its foreign competitors. Under these circumstances,
it is no wonder that the growth of the American merchant marine should have l)een
so rapid as to have excited astonishment not only abroad but even in the United
States itself. It is interesting to note that this estimate of comparative costs is
furnished by an English authority.
Comparison of Cost of Operation of an American with that of an Eng-
lish Vessel, Each of 250 Tons, in 1805
On a voyage between Englatid and America and return
Cost of American Vessel of 250 tons, £2,000.
Cost of EngUsh Vessel of 250 tons, £4,000.
A ship of 250 tons would carry 3,000 bbls. of flour at 9 s £1,350
The average freight from England back 600
£1,950
(i American cJmrges £ s. d.
C5v Insurance out & home on
\ £2,500 at 4i% 95
8 men, 5 months at £5 200
Captain and mate at £10
each 100
2400 lbs. bread at i6s 19 4
Beef, 10 bbls. at 32 s 16
Pork, 10 bbls, at 50 s 25
150 gallons rum 16 17
Interest of £2000, 5 months .41 13 4
513 14 .4
English charges £
Insurance out & home on
£4,000 at 6 % 360
12 men, 5 months at £5.
Captain and mate at £10
each 100
360 lbs. bread for 14 people
for 5 months at 32 s. .. . 57
15 bbls. of beef at £4 ... . 60
15 bbls. pork at 90s 67
220 gallons rum at 5 s ... . 55
Interest on £4000 5
months 83
300
6 8
1083 8 8
G. Foreign Commerce^ i'j8g-i8o'/^
One of the results of the Napoleonic wars was to divert the profitable carr>ing
trade in part from the belligerent nations to the vessels of the only imixjrtani
neutral nation, the United States. The tonnage of American shii)s engaged in
foreign trade increased greatly. But not only was an impetus given to our shi|)i>iii^';
agriculture, the products of which were in growing demand in both Europe ami
EngUiid, alBO experienced a great stimulus and shared in the profits.
* Report of the Committee of Correspondence on Trade with the East Imw ^ <•
China. British Parliamentary Papers, 1815. Quoted in Merchant Venturers 0/ < >/</
Salem. By R. E. Pcalxxly (Boston, 1912), 151. Printed by permission of llu
author and the publishers, Houghton Mifflin Company.
« Statistical Annals . . . of the United States. By Adam Seybcrt (I'hila
delphia, 1818), 59-60.
AMERICAN COMMERCE AND COMMERCIAL POLICY 207
Independent of our newly acquired political character, circum-
stances arose in Europe, by which a new and extensive field was
presented for our commercial enterprize. The most memorable of
revolutions was commenced in France, in 1789; the wars, consequent
to that event, created a demand for our exports, and invited our
shipping for the carrying trade of a very considerable portion of
Europe; we not only carried the colonial productions to the several
parent states, but we also became the purchasers of them in the French,
Spanish and Dutch colonies. A new era was established in our
commercial history; the individuals, who partook of these advantages,
were numerous; our catalogue of merchants was swelled much beyond
what it was entitled to be from the state of our population. Many
persons, who had secured moderate capitals, from mechanical pur-
suits, soon became the most adventurous. ^ The predominant spirit
of that time has had a powerful effect in determining the character of
the rising generation in the United States. The brilliant prospects
held out by commerce, caused our citizens to neglect the mechani-
cal and manufacturing branches of industry; ... so certain were
the profits on the foreign voyages, that commerce was only pursued
as an art; all the knowledge, which former experience had considered
as essentially necessary, was now unattended to; the philosophy of
commerce, if I am allowed the expression, was totally neglected; the
nature of foreign productions was but little investigated by the
shippers in the United States; the demand in Europe for foreign
merchandise, especially for that of the West Indies and South America,
secured to all these cargoes a ready sale, with a great profit. The most
adventurous became the most wealthy, and that without the knowledge
of any of the principles which govern commerce under ordinary cir-
cumstances. No one was limited to any one branch of trade; the
same individual was concerned in voyages to Asia, South America,
the West Indies and Europe. Our tonnage increased in a ratio, with
the extended catalogue of the exports; we seemed to have arrived
at the maximum of human prosperity; in proportion to our popu-
lation we ranked as the most commercial nation; in point of value,
our trade was only second to that of Great Britain.
^ We have no trading companies under the authority of the United States.
The occupations here are voluntary; it is very common for persons to change their
pursuits frequently; foreigners enjoy the same commercial privileges as the citizens
of the United States, except, that aliens cannot, in the whole or in part, be the owners
of American vesssels.
208
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
H. Tonnage in Foreign and Coasting Trade, lyS^iSij *
The steady growth of the American merchant marine during the period under
review "has no parallel," according to Pitkin, "in the commercial annals of the
world." A great stimulus was given to our carrying trade and foreign commerce
by the absorption of the European nations in the Napoleonic wars.
The following is the amount of tonnage from 1789 to i8 15 inclu-
sive, with its employment, in the foreign trade and coasting trade: —
Year
Foreign trade
Coasting trade
1789
123,893
68,607
1790
346,254
103,775
1791
363,110
106,494
1792
411,438 .
120,957
1793
367,734
114,853
1794
438,862
167,227
1795
529,470
164,795
1796
576,733
195,423
1797
597,777
214,077
1798
603,376
227,343
1799
669,197
220,904*
1800
669,921
245,295
1801
718,549
246,255
1802
560,380
260,543
1803
597,157
268,676
1804
672,530
286,840
180S
749,341
301,366
1806
808,284
309,977
1807
848,306
318,189
1808
769,053
387,684
1809
910,059
371,500
x8io
984,269
371,114
1811
768,852
386,258
1813
760,624
443,180
1813
674,853
433.404
1814
674,632
425,713
181S
854,294
435,066
1
V. Interference with Neutral Trade |
A. Growth of the Neutral Trade, iygj-1816 ^
As the French navy was unable to protect her own merchant vessels, the French,
foverament opened her West Indian ports to American ships, which began to carry
• A StoHstical VUw of the Commerce of the United States of America.
Pitkin (jd edition, New York, 181 7), 425-9, passim.
• A Statistical View of the Commerce of the United States of A merica .
Pitkin (id edition, New York, 1817), 36-7.
By Timothy,
RvTimothv
AMERICAN COMMERCE AND COMMERCIAL POLICY 209
her colonial products to France. To this trade England objected, whereupon the
American vessels trading with the West Indies touched first at an American port
and took out new clearance papers before proceeding on their journey to France.
The growth of this indirect carrying trade may be studied in the fourth column of
the table.
The whole value of exports in each year, from lygo to 1816, and the value
of those of domestic and foreign origin, since i8oj, was as follows: —
Total value of
Value of exports
Value of exports
To Sept. 30
exports.
of domestic origin.
of foreign origin.
DoUs.
DoUs.
Dolls.
1791
1792
1793
1794
1795
1796
1797
1798
1799
1800
19,012,041
20,753,098
26,109,572
33,026,233
47,989,472
67,064,097
56,850,206
61,527,097
78,665,522
70,971,780
94,115,925
72,483,160
55,800,033
1801
1802
1803
42,205,961
13,594,072
1804
77,699,074
41,467,477
36,231,597
1805
95,566,021
42,387,002
53,179,019
1806
101,536,963
41,253,727
60,283,236
1807
108,343,150'
48,699,592
59,643,558
1808
22,430,960
9,433,546
12,997,414
1809
52,203,283
31,405,702
20,797,531
1810
66,757,970
42,366,675
24,391,295
1811
61,316,833
45,294,043
16,022,790
1812
38,527,236
30,032,109
8,495,127
1813
27,855,997
25,008,152
2,847,845
1814
6,927,441
6,782,272
145,169
1815
52,557,753
45,974,403
6,583,350
1816
81,920,452
64,781,896
17,138,555
B. Frauds of the Neutral Flags, 1805 ^
The evasion of the English prohibitions upon American trade between the
French colonies and France aroused considerable bitterness in England and led
^ War in Disguise; or, the Frauds of the Neutral Flags. By James Stephen
(London, 1805), 40-121, passim.
2IO READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
eventually to the Orders in Council. The British case against America was forcibly
stated by Stephen, an Knglish barrister. His book excited a great deal of
attention and was probably an imixirtant factor in leading to reprisals against our
commerce by Great Britain.
From these causes it has naturally happened that the protection
given by the American flag, to the intercourse between our European
enemies and their colonies, since the instruction of January, 1794,
has chiefly been in the way of a double voyage, in which America
has been the half-way house, or central point of communication.
The fabrics and commodities of France, Spain, and Holland, ha\'e
been brought under American colours to ports in the United States;
and from thence re-exported, under the same flag, for the supply
of the hostile colonies. Again, the produce of those colonies has
been brought, in a like manner, to the American ports, and from
thence re-shipped to Europe. . . .
It seems scarcely necessary to shew, that, by this practice, the
licence accorded by the British Government was grossly abused. . . .
By the merchants, and custom-house ofiicers of the United States,
the line of neutral duty in this case was evidently not misconceived;
for the departures from it, were carefully concealed, by artful and
fraudulent contrivance. When a ship arrived at one of their ports
to neutralize a voyage that fell within the restriction, e. g. from a
Spanish colony to Spain, all her papers were immediately sent on
shore, or destroyed. Not one document was left, which could dis-
close the fact that her cargo had been taken in at a colonial port:
and new bills of lading, invoices, clearances, and passports were put
on board, all importing that it had been shipped in America. Nor
were official certificates, or oaths wanting, to support the fallacious
pretence. The fraudulent precaution of the agents often went so
far, as to discharge all the officers and crew, and sometimes even the
master, and to ship an entire new company in their stead, who, being
ignorant of the former branch of the voyage, could, in case of examina-
tion or capture, support the new papers by their declarations and
oaths, as far as their knowledge extended, with a safe conscience.
Thus, the ship and cargo were sent to sea again, perhaps within eight
and forty hours from the time of her arrival, in a condition to defy
the scrutiny of any British cruizer, by which she should be stopped
and examined in the course of her passage to Europe. . . .
. . . our prize courts . . . finding themselves to have been
deceived for years past by fallacious evidence, have resolved to be
cheated in the same way no longer. It is on this account only, and
AMERICAN COMMERCE AND COMMERCIAL POLICY 211
the consequent capture of some American West Indiamen supposed
to be practicing the old fraud, that we are accused of insulting the
neutral powers, of innovating on the acknowledged law of nations,
and of treating as contraband of war, the produce of the West India
Islands. . . .
The worst consequence, perhaps, of the independence and growing
commerce of America, is the seduction of our seamen. We hear
continually of clamours in that country, on the score of its sailors
being pressed at sea by our frigates. But when, and how, have
these sailors become Americans? — By engaging in her merchant
service during the last and the present war; and sometimes by ob-
taining that formal naturalization, which is gratuitously given, after
they have sailed two years from an American port. If those who by
birth, and by residence and employment, prior to 1793, were con-
fessedly British, ought still to be regarded as his Majesty's subjects,
a very considerable part of the navigators of American ships, are
such at this moment; though, unfortunately, they are not easily
distinguishable from genuine American seamen. . . .
It is truly vexatious to reflect, that, by this abdication of our
belligerent rights, we not only give up the best means of annoying
the enemy, but raise up, at the same time, a crowd of dangerous
rivals for the seduction of our sailors, and put bribes into their hands
for the purpose. We not only allow the trade of the hostile colonies
to pass safely, in derision of our impotent warfare, but to be carried
on by the mariners of Great Britain. This illegitimate and noxious
navigation, therefore, is nourished with the life blood of our navy.
C. British Orders in Council and French Decrees^ 180J-1808 ^
During the Napoleonic wars from 1793 to 1803 the carrying trade with Europe
had fallen into the hands of the people of the United States, who were the only
neutral nation of commercial importance. The profits from this trade, from
ship-building, and from the production and exportation of foodstuffs, had been
enormous. But, in their efforts to hurt each other, England and France inter-
fered seriously with this trade and disregarded our rights as neutrals. The follow-
ing report sums up briefly some of these injuries.
^ Report of a Committee of the United States Senate on the Negotiations with Great
Britain. American State Papers, Series Foreign Relations (Washington, 1832),
III, 220-219 *•
For memorials from the merchants of New York and Philadelphia in 1805, see
Ibid., II, 737-41; and for the documents of all the orders and decrees, see Ibid.,
Ill, 262-94.
212 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
In Senate of the U. S., April i6, 1808.
Mr. Anderson, from the committee to whom was referred, on the
4th instant, the correspondence between Mr. Monroe and Mr.
Canning, and between Mr. Madison and Mr. Rose, relative to
the attack made upon the frigate Chesapeake by the British
ship of war Leopard; and also the communications made to
the Senate by the President of the United States, on the 30th
day of March last, containing a letter from Mr. Erskine to the
Secretary of State, and a letter from Mr. Champagny to General
Armstrong, rep)orted:
That, on a review of the several orders, decrees, and decisions
of Great Britain and France, within the period of the existing war, it
apf>ears that, previous to the measures referred to in the letters from
Mr. Erskine to the Secretary of State, and from Mr. Champagny to
General Armstrong, various and heavy injuries have been committed
against the neutral commerce and navigation of the United States
under the following heads:
ist. The British order of June, 1803, unlawfully restricting
the trade of the United States with a certain portion of the unblock-
aded ports of her enemies, and condemning vessels with innocent car-
goes, on a return from ports where they had deposited contraband
articles.
2d. The capture and condemnation, in the British courts of
admiralty, of American property, on a pretended principle, debarring
neutral nations from a trade with the enemies of Great Britain inter-
dicted in time of peace. The injuries suffered by the citizens of the
United States, on this head, arose, not from any public order of the
British council, but from a variation in the principle upon which
the courts of admiralty pronounced their decisions. These decisions
have, indeed, again varied, without any new orders of council being
issued; and in the higher courts of admiralty some of the decisions,
which had formed the greatest cause for complaint, have been re-
versed, and the property restored. There still remains, however, a
heavy claim of indemnity for confiscations which were made during
the period of these unwarrantable decisions, and for which all nego-
tiation has hitherto proved unavailing.
3d. Blockades notified to the minister of the United States at
London, and thence made a ground of capture against the trade
of the United States, in entire disregard of the law of nations, and
even of the definition of legal blockades, laid down by the British
AMERICAN COMMERCE AND COMMERCIAL POLICY 213
Government itself. Examples of these illegitimate blockades will
be found in the notifications of the blockade of May 16, 1806, of the
coast from the river Elbe to Brest, inclusive; blockade of nth May,
1807, expounded 19th June, 1807, of the Elbe, Weser, and Ems, and
the coast between the same; blockade nth of May, 1807, of the
Dardanelles and Smyrna; blockade of 8th January, 1808, of Cartha-
gena, Cadiz, and St. Lucar, and of all the intermediate ports between
Carthagena and St. Lucar, comprehending a much greater extent
of coast than the whole British navy could blockade according to
the established law of nations.
4th. To these injuries, immediately authorized by the British
Government, might be added other spurious blockades by British
naval commanders, particularly that of the island of Curacoa, which,
for a very considerable period, was made a pretext for very extensive
spoliations on the commerce of the United States.
5th. The British proclamation of October last, which makes it
the duty of the British officers to impress from American merchant
vessels all such of their crews as might be taken or mistaken for
British subjects; those officers being the sole and absolute judges
in the case.
For the decrees and acts of the French Government violating the
maritime law of nations, in respect to the United States, the committee
refer to the instances contained in the report of the Secretary of State,
January 25, 1806, to the Senate, in one of which, viz: a decree of the
French General Ferrand, at St. Domingo, are regulations sensibly
affecting the neutral and commercial rights of the United States.
The French act, next in order of time, is the decree of November
21, 1806, declaring the British isles in a state of blockade, and pro-
fessing to be a retaliation on antecedent proceedings of Great Britain,
violating the law of nations.
This decree was followed, first, by the British order of January,
1807, professing to be a retaliation on that decree, and subjecting
to capture the trade of the United States, from the port of one belliger-
ent to a port of another; and, secondly, by the orders of November
last, professing to be a further retaliation on the same decree, and
prohibiting the commerce of neutrals with the enemies of Great
Britain, as explained in the aforesaid letter of Mr. Erskine.
These last British orders again have been followed by the French
decree of December 17, purporting to be a retaliation on the said
orders, and to be put in force against the commerce of the United
States, as stated in the aforesaid letter of Mr. Champagny.
214 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
The committee forbear to enter into a comparative view of these
proceedings of the different belligerent Powers, deeming it sufficient
to present the materials from which it may be formed. They think
it their duty, nevertheless, to offer the following remarks, suggested
by a collective view of the whole:
The injury and dangers resulting to the commerce of the United
States from the course and increase of these belligerent measures,
and from similar ones adopted by other nations, were such as first
to induce the more circumspect of our merchants and ship-owners
no longer to commit their property to the high seas, and at length
to impose on Congress the indispensable duty of interposing some
legislative provision for such an unexampled state of things.
Among other expedients, out of which a choice was to be made,
may be reckoned —
I St. A protection of commerce by ships of war.
2d. A protection of it by self-armed vessels.
3d. A war of offence as well as of defence.
4th. A general suspension of foreign commerce.
5th. An embargo on our vessels, mariners, and merchandise.
This last was adopted, and the policy of it was enforced, at the
particular moment, by accounts, quickly after confirmed, of the
British orders of November, and by the probability that these would
be followed, as has also happened by an invigorated spirit of retalia-
tion in other belligerent Powers; the happy effect of the precaution
is demonstrated by the well-known fact that the ports of Europe
are crowded with captured vessels of the United States, unfortunately
not within the reach of the precaution. ^
D. Efect of the Embargo on New York City^ 1807 ^
As a peaceful mode of retaliation for the indignities and injuries received by
American shipping at the hands of the French and English, Congress passed the
embargo act, which prohibited American vessels leaving the ports of the United
States for those of any foreign nation. The effect of the embargo upon our foreign
trade and the industries contributory to it was immediate and disastrous. A
graphic picture of conditions in New York City before and after the embarjjo is
given by LAmbert, an English traveler in the United States.
When I arrived at New York in November [1807], the port w
filled with shipping, and the wharfs were crowded with commodilu
» Tra9di through Canada, and the United Stales of North Amcrioi. in ttw Vcors
i8o6t 1807, (r 180S. By John Lambert (2d edition, London, iSi ,). II. oj 5,
AMERICAN COMMERCE AND COMMERCIAL POLICY 215
of every description. Bales of cotton, wool, and merchandize;
barrels of pot-ash, rice, flour, and salt provisions; hogsheads of
sugar, chests of tea, puncheons of rum, and pipes of wine; boxes,
cases, packs and packages of all sizes and denominations, were
strewed upon the wharfs and landing-places, or upon the decks of
the shipping. All was noise and bustle. The carters were driving
in every direction; and the sailors and labourers upon the wharfs,
and on board the vessels, were moving their ponderous burthens
from place to place. The merchants and their clerks were busily
engaged in their counting-houses, or upon the piers. The Tontine
coffee-house was filled with under- writers, brokers, merchants, traders,
and politicians; selling, purchasing, trafficking, or insuring; some
reading, others eagerly inquiring the news. The steps and balcony
of the coffee-house were crowded with people bidding, or listening
to the several auctioneers, who had elevated themselves upon a hogs-
head of sugar, a puncheon of rum, or a bale of cotton; and with
Stentorian voices were exclaiming, "Once, twice." "Once, twice."
"Another cent." "Thank ye, gentlemen," or were knocking down the
goods, which took up one side of the street, to the best purchaser.
The coffee-house slip, and the corners of Wall and Pearl-streets,
were jammed up with carts, drays, and wheel-barrows; horses and
men were huddled promiscuously together, leaving little or no room for
passengers to pass. Such was the appearance of this part of the town
when I arrived. Everything was in motion; all was life, bustle,
and activity. The people were scampering in all directions to trade
with each other, and to ship off their purchases for the European, Asian,
African, and West Indian markets. Every thought, look, word, and
action of the multitude seemed to be absorbed by commerce; the
welkin rang with its busy hum, and all were eager in the pursuit of
its riches.
But on my return to New York the following April, what a con-
trast was presented to my view! and how shall I describe the melan-
choly dejection that was painted upon the countenances of the
people, who seemed to have taken leave of all their former gaiety
and cheerfulness? The coffee-house slip, the wharfs and quays
along South-street, presented no longer the bustle and activity that
had prevailed there five months before. The port, indeed, was full
of shipping; but they were dismantled and laid up. Their decks
were cleared, their hatches fastened down, and scarcely a sailor was
to be found on board. Not a box, bale, cask, barrel, or package, was
to be seen upon the wharfs. Many of the counting-houses were shut
2i6 ECONOMIC READINGS IN HISTORY
up, or advertised to be let; and the few solitary merchants, clerks,
porters, and labourers, that were to be seen, were walking about with
their hands in their pockets. Instead of sixty or a hundred carts
that used to stand in the street for hire, scarcely a dozen appeared,
and they were unemployed; a few coasting sloops, and schooners,
which were clearing out for some of the ports in the United States,
were all that remained of that immense business which was carried
on a few months before. The coffee-house was almost empty; or, if
there happened to be a few people in it, it was merely to pass away
the time which hung heavy on their hands, or to enquire anxiously
after news from Europe, and from Washington: or perhaps to pur-
chase a few bills, that were selling at ten or twelve per cent, above
par. In fact, every thing presented a melancholy appearance. The
streets near the water-side were almost deserted, the grass had begun
to grow upon the wharfs, and the minds of the people were tortured
by the vague and idle rumours that were set afloat upon the arrival
of every letter from England or from the seat of government. In
short, the scene was so gloomy and forlorn, that had it been the
month of September instead of April, I should verily have thought
that a malignant fever was raging in the place; so desolating were
the effects of the embargo, which in the short space of five months
had deprived the first commercial city in the States of all its life,
bustle, and activity; caused above one hundred and twenty bank-
ruptcies; and completely annihilated its foreign commerce! . . .
(April 13) Everything wore a dismal aspect at New York. The
embargo had now continued upwards of three months, and the salu-
tary check which Congress imagined it would have upon the conduct
of the belligerent powers was extremely doubtful, while the ruination
of the commerce of the United States appeared certain, if such de-
structive measure was- persisted in. Already had 120 failures taken
place among the merchants and traders, to the amount of more
than 5,000,000 dollars; and there were above 500 vessels in the
harbour, which were lying up useless, and rotting for want of em-
ployment. Thousands of sailors were either destitute of bread,
wandering about the country, or had entered into the British ser\'ice.
The merchants had shut up their counting-houses, and discharged
their clerks, and the farmers refrained from cultivating their land;!
for if they brought their produce to market, they either could not|
sell at all, or were obliged to dispose of it for only a fourth of its]
value.
AMERICAN COMMERCE AND COMMERCIAL POLICY 217
E. War of 1812^
The policy of remonstrance, of a domestic embargo, and of non-intercourse
with England proving ineffective in securing a redress of American grievances, war
was finally decided upon. The tone of the following report shows the high
temper to which the people had been aroused.
Mr. Calhoun, from the Committee on Foreign Relations, to whom
was referred the message of the President of the United States
of the ist of June, 181 2, made the following report:
That, after the experience which the United States have had of
the great injustice of the British Government towards them, exem-
plified by so many acts of violence and oppression, it will be more
difficult to justify to the impartial world their patient forbearance
than the measures to which it has become necessary to resort, to
avenge the wrongs, and vindicate the rights and honor of the nation.
Your committee are happy to observe, on a dispassionate review
of the conduct of the United States, that they see in it no cause for
censure. . . .
More than seven years have elapsed since the commencement of
this system of hostile aggression by the British Government on the
rights and interests of the United States. The manner of its com-
mencement was not less hostile than the spirit with which it has
been prosecuted. The United States have invariably done every
thing in their power to preserve the relations of friendship with
Great Britain. . . .
From this review of the multiplied wrongs of the British Govern-
ment since the commencement of the present war, it must be evident
to the impartial world that the contest which is now forced on the
United States is radically a contest for their sovereignty and inde-
pendence. Your committee will not enlarge on any of the injuries,
however great, which have had a transitory effect. They wish to
call the attention of the House to those of a permanent nature only,
which intrench so deeply on our most important rights, and wound
so extensively and vitally our best interests, as could not fail to de-
prive the United States of the principal advantages of their resolu-
tion, if submitted to. The control of our commerce by Great Britain,
in regulating at pleasure, and expelling it almost from the ocean;
the oppressive manner in which these regulations have been carried
into effect, by seizing and confiscating such of our vessels, with their
^ Report of the House Committee on Foreign Relations. American State Papers,
Foreign Relations (Washington, 1832), III, 567, 570,
2i8 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
cargoes, as were said to have violated her edicts, often without pre-
vious warning of their danger; the impressment of our citizens from
on board our own vessels, on the high seas, and elsewhere, and holding
them in bondage till it suited the convenience of their oppressors to
deliver them up, are encroachments of that high and dangerous
tendency, which could not fail to produce that pernicious effect; nor
would those be the only consequences that would result from it. The
British Government might, for a while, be satisfied with the ascen-
dency thus gained over us, but its pretensions would soon increase.
The proof which so complete and disgraceful a submission to its
authority would afford of our degeneracy, could not fail to inspire
confidence that there was no limit to which its usurpations and our
degradations might not be carried. Your committee believing that
the freeborn sons of America are worthy to enjoy the liberty which
their fathers purchased at the price of so much blood and treasure,
and seeing in the measures adopted by Great Britain a course com-
menced and persisted in which must lead to a loss of national char-
acter and independence, feel no hesitation in advising resistance by
force, in which the Americans of the present day will prove to the
enemy and to the world, that we have not only inherited that liberty
which our fathers gave us, but also the will and power to maintain it.
Relying on the patriotism of the nation, and confidently trusting
that the Lord of Hosts will go with us to battle in a righteous cause,
and crown our efforts with success, your committee recommend an
immediate apf>eal to arms. 2,
CHAPTER VII
AGRICULTURE, SLAVERY, AND INTERNAL TRADE
1783-1808
I. Agriculture in the North
A. Efect of the Revolution on Agriculture, lyS^-iySg *
The disorganizing effect of the war of the Revolution upon agriculture is
here pictured, and also the difficulty of improvements.
As to the 5th article of inquiry contained in your Grace's letter
from the observation I have myself made and from every information
I can collect, the agriculture of the Middle and Southern States is
certainly increasing at this time; tho' I do not conceive it has yet
reached its level antecedent to the war.
During the troubles my Lord a number of useful labourers were
taken from the pursuits of agriculture and employed as soldiers; —
the diminution of useful labor occasioned a diminution of the crops
and the farmers sustained a heavy loss thereby — but a very consider-
able discouragement to agriculture existed during the war, the inter-
course with Europe and the W. Indies was so frequently obstructed
by the cruizers that the farmer found no certain vent for his produce
and fearful that the little he raised might perish on his hands he /
looked scarcely further than to the nurture of his family and became
careless of cultivating more than their wants required: — many farm-
ers too quitted their homes and engaged in military pursuits: this
course of life promoted dissipation and inspired sentiments very in-
compatible with the humility of agricultural life: — Men who had
commanded in the field could not suddenly brook a return to their
former stations — the ruinous consequences of supineness dissipation
and luxury were soon severely felt; numbers became involved in
debt — their farms were impoverished and their farm houses fell into
decay, so that upon the accession of peace those means which were
^ Letters of Phineas Bond. In Annual Report of the American Historical Asso-
ciation (Washington, 1897), I, 628-9.
220 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
formerly exerted for the purposes of tillage and improvement were
appropriated to the discharge of old debts, (which had accumulated
to a fearful size) and to the payment of taxes far exceeding those of
former times. — These inconveniences are gradually wearing away —
the eyes of the people seem now to be opened to their true interests —
the prosp>ect of an efficient government has greatly encouraged them,
industry has succeeded to idleness and husbandry appears to be in a
progressive state — the crop of the last harvest was uncommonly
great, the exports of the present year from this port and from New
York, it is supposed will be equal to those of any former years whatever.
tho' perhaps upon an average calculation for several years to come ft
would not be found that the produce of this state at this rate of
computation nearly equals what it was before the war.
B. Agriculture in the United States, lygz ^
Agriculture had probably reached its lowest ebb in the United States in the i
period after the Revolution. Coxe here gives a very pessimistic account of the i
conditions then existing.
The most important of all the employments of our citizens, that
of the farmer, remains to be noticed. It is very much to be feared
that, in point of execution, a candid examination would prove thi
best of pursuits, to be most imperfectly conducted. The proofi
are, innumerable instances of impoverished lands; precious bodies
of meadow lands, in the old settlements of some of the states, which
remain in a state of nature; a frequent inattention to the making or
preserving of manure; as frequent inattention to the condition of the
seed grain, evidenced by the growth of inferior grain in fields of wheat,
and by the complexion of the flour in some quarters; the bad con-
dition of hams, stables, and fences, and in some places the total
want of the former; the deficiency of spring-houses or other cod
dairies, in extensive tracts of country; the want of a trifling stock
of bees; the frequent want of orchards, and the neglect of those
which have been planted by preceding occupants; the neglect of the
sugar-tree; the neglect of fallen timber and fuel, accompanied wit!
the extravagant felling of timber trees for fuel; the neglect of house-
hold manufactures in many families; the neglect of making pot-ash
the non-use of oxen; and above all, the growth in substance of largt
bodies of farmers on lands of an ordinary quality, while the inhabit
» A View of the UnUed States of America. By Tench Coxe (Philadelphia, 1 794)
AGRICULTURE, SLAVERY AND INTERNAL TRADE 221
ants of extensive scenes hardly extract, from much superior lands,
sustenance and clothing.
It is a fact very painful to observe and unpleasant to represent,
but it is indubitably true, that farming, in the grain states, their
great best business, the employment most precious in free govern-
ments, is, too generally speaking, the least understood, or the least
economically and attentively pursued, of any of the occupations
which engage the citizens of the United States. It is acknowledged,
however, with satisfaction, that great changes have been lately made;
and that the energy, spirit of improvement, and economy, which have
been recently displayed, promise the regular and rapid melioration of
the agricultural system. All other things have taken a course of
great improvement: and it cannot be apprehended, that the yeo-
manry of the United States will permit themselves to be exceeded
by any of their brethren, in the most valuable characteristic of good
citizens — usefulness in their proper sphere.
11. Agriculture in the South
A. Agriculture in Virginia, lyS'j ^
George Washington was deeply interested in the promotion of scientific agri-
culture in the United States, and corresponded with some of the leading men in
England on this subject. Arthur Young, to whom this letter was addressed, was
probably the foremost authority in England on the subject of agriculture and
wrote voluminously on this topic. Washington introduced a plan of scientific
rotation of crops on his own estate instead of the exhaustive practice of continuous
tobacco growing.
Mount Vernon, i November, 1787.
. . . Before I undertake to give the information you request,
respecting the arrangements of the farms in this neighborhood, &c.,
I must observe that there is, perhaps, scarcely any part of America,
where farming has been less attended to than in this State. The culti-
vation of tobacco has been almost the sole object with men of landed
property, and consequently a regular course of crops have never been
in view. The general custom has been, first to raise a crop of Indian
corn (maize) which according to the mode of cultivation, is a good
preparation for wheat; then a crop of wheat; after which the ground
is respited (except from weeds, and every trash that can contribute
^ Letters to Arthur Yowig, England, containing an account of his husbandry ivith
a map of his Farm, his Opinions on Various Questions in Agriculture and many
Particulars of the Rural ■ Economy of the' United States. By George Washington
(London, 1801). Also in Writings (Ford edition, New York, 1891), XI, 178-180.
222 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
to its foulness) for about eighteen months; and so on, alternately,
without any dressing, till the land is exhausted; when it is turned out,
without being sown with grass-seeds, or any method taken to restore it;
and another piece is ruined in the same manner. No more cattle is
raised than can be supported by lowland meadows, swamps, &c.,
and the tops and blades of Indian corn; as very few persons have
attended to sowing grasses, and connecting cattle with their crops.
The Indian corn is the chief support of the labourers and horses.
Our lands, as I mentioned in my first letter to you, were originally
very good; but use, and abuse, have made them quite otherwise.
The above is the mode of cultivation which has been generally
pursued here, but the system of husbandry which has been found
so beneficial in England, and which must be greatly promoted by
your valuable annals, is now gaining ground. There are several
(among which I may class myself), who are endeavoring to get into
your regular and systematic course of cropping, as fast as the nature
of the business will admit; so that I hope in the course of a few years,
we shall make a more respectable figure as farmers, than we have
hitherto done.
B. Farming in Maryland and Virginia^ lySS ^
In the states of Maryland and Virginia, where steady cultivation of tobacco
had exhausted the land, agriculture was at a very low ebb during the second half
of the 1 8th century. Some of the more progressive farmers were beginning to
follow more diversified farming instead of growing tobacco, but the majority did
not have the knowledge or the energy to alter traditional practices.
Cotton is cultivated in Maryland, as in Virginia; but little care
is taken to perfect either its culture or its manufacture. You see
excellent lands in these two states; but they have very few good
meadows, though these might be made in abundance. For want of
attention and labour, the inhabitants make but little hay; and what
they have is not good. They likewise neglect the cultivation of
potatoes, carrots, and turnips for their cattle, of which their neigh-
bors of the north make great use. Their cattle are left without
shelter in winter, and nourished with the tops of Indian corn. Of
consequence many of them die with cold and hunger; and those
that survive the winter, are miserably meagre. . . .
Nothing but a great crop, and the total abnegation of every
comfort, to which the negroes are condemned, can compensate thi
» New Travels in the United Slices of America, performed in 1788. By J. P»
BriMOt de WarviUc (Dublin, 1792), 432, 436.
AGRICULTURE, SLAVERY AND INTERNAL TRADE 223
expenses attending this production [of tobacco^ before it arrives at
the market. Thus in proportion as the good lands are exhausted, and
by the propagating of the principles of humanity, less hard labour is
required of the slaves, this culture must decline. And thus you see
already in Virginia fields enclosed, and meadows succeed to tobacco.
Such is the system of the proprietors who best understand their
interest; among whom I place General Washington, who has lately
renounced the culture of this pl^nt.
C. Care of Live Stock, '^794 ^
If the energies of Washington had not been so thoroughly absorbed in military
and political services to his country, he would have ranked high as a progressive
and scientific farmer. Among the men with whom he corresponded on agricultural
subjects and whose advice he sought was Sir John Sinclair, who was the first
president of the English Board of Agriculture.
Philadelphia, 20 July, 1794.
Sir:
I am indebted to you for your several favours, of the 15th of
August and 4 of September of the last, and for that of the 6th of
February in the present year; for which, and the pamphlets accom-
panying them, my thanks are particularly due. . . .
Our domestic animals (as well as our agriculture) are inferior
to yours in point of size, but this does not proceed from any defect
in the stamina of them; but to deficient care in providing for their
support; experience having abundantly evidenced that where our
pastures are as well improved as the soil and climate will admit, —
where a competent store of wholesome provender is laid up, and proper
care used in serving it — that our horses, black cattle, sheep, &c.—
are not inferior to the best of their respective kinds that have been
imported from England. Nor is the wool of our sheep inferior to
that of the common sort with you. — As a proof — after the peace
of Paris in 1783, and my return to the occupation of a farmer, I
paid particular attention to my breed of sheep (of which I usually
kept about seven or eight hundred). By this attention, at the shear-
ing of 1789, the fleeces yielded me the average quantity of 5 J of wool —
a fleece of which promiscuously taken, I sent to Mr. Arthur Young,
who put it for examination into the hands of manufacturers. They
^ Letters to Sir John Sinclair on Agriculture atid other interesting topics. By
George Washington (London, 1801). Also in Writings (Ford edition, New York,
189 1), XII, 440-4.
224 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
pronounced it to be equal in quality to the Kentish wool. In the
same year (i.e. 1789) I was again called from my home, and have
not had it in my power since to pay any attention to my farms. The
consequence of which is, that my sheep at the last shearing, yielded
me not more than 2 J.
This is not a single instance of the difference between care and
neglect. Nor is the difference between good and bad management
confined to that species of stock, foj we find that good pastures and
proper attention can, and does fill our markets with beef of seven,
eight, and more hundredweight the four quarters; whereas from
450 to 500 (especiaUy in the States south of this, where less attention
hitherto has been paid to grass) may be found about the average
weight. — In this market some bullocks were killed in the months
of March and April last, the weights of which as taken from the
accounts which were published at the time, you will find in a paper
enclosed. These were pampered steers, but from 800 to 1000, the
four quarters, is no uncommon weight. .
D. History of Cotton Growing, 1775-1795 ^
The inventions of Hargreaves, Arkwright, Crompton, and Cartwright in Eng-
land between 1770 and 1785, which revolutionized the cotton industry, created
immense demand for cotton, but until the invention of the cotton gin, little cotton;
was grown for export in this country. Ramsay wrote his History in 1808, thoi
it was not published until fifty years later.
. . . The first Provincial Congress in South Carolina, held v^
January, 1775, recommended to the inhabitants "to raise cotton,"
yet very little practical attention was paid to their recommendation.
A small quantity only was raised for domestic manufactures. This
neglect cannot solely be referred to the confusion of the times, for
agriculture had been successfully prosecuted for ten years after the
termination of the Revolutionary war before the Carolinians began
to cultivate it to any considerable extent.^ In this culture the
Georgians took the lead. They began to raise it as an article of export
soon after the peace of 1783. Their success recommended it to their
» Hiitory of South Carolina. By David Ramsay (Newberry, S. C, 1858), U,
120-X.
* The labor-saving machines invented in Kngland within the last thirt) -five
yean, greatly promoted the manufacture of cotton, and thereby opened a steady
and advantageous market for the raw materials. This was one of the princij
causes which encouraged its cultivation in the United States.
AGRICULTURE, SLAVERY AND INTERNAL TRADE 225
neighbors. The whole quantity exported from Carolina in any one
year prior to 1795 was inconsiderable, but in that year it amounted
to £1,109,653.^ The cultivation of it has been ever since in-
creasing, and on the first year of the present century eight million
of pounds were exported from South Carolina. . . .
The cotton chiefly cultivated on the sea-coast is denominated the
black seed or long staple cotton, which is of the best quality and
admirably adapted to the finest manufactures. The wool is easily
separated from the seed by roller-gins which do not injure the staple.
A pair of rollers worked by one laborer give about twenty-five pounds
of clean cotton daily. The cotton universally cultivated in the
middle and upper country is called the green seed kind. It is less
silky and more wooly, and adheres so tenaciously to the seed that it
requires the action of a saw-gin to separate the wool from the seed.
This cuts the staple exceedingly; but as the staple of this kind of
cotton is not fit for the finer fabrics it is not considered injurious.
The quality of these two kinds is very different. The wool of the
green seed is considerably the cheapest; but that species is much
more productive than the other. An acre of good cotton land will
usually produce one hundred and fifty pounds of clean wool of the
long staple kind. An acre of land of equal quality will usually pro-
duce two hundred pounds of the green seed or short staple kind.
Besides these, yellow or nankeen cotton is also cultivated in the upper
country for domestic use. Two ingenious artists. Miller and
Whiteney of Connecticut, invented a saw-gin for the separation of
the wool from the seed which has facilitated that operation in the
highest degree. The Legislature of South Carolina purchased their
patent-right for ^50,000 MoUars, and then munificently threw open
its use and benefits to all its citizens.
E. Invention of the Cotton Gin, lyg^ ^
The work of separating the seeds from the lint of the cotton was at first done by-
hand. But this was a very tedious and slow process. Whitney wrote that he
had never seen anyone who claimed that he could clean as much as one pound a
day in this way. At this rate it would take almost two years for one person to
clean a bale of cotton. The importance of Whitney's invention becomes evident
when we learn that it would clean 300 pounds of cotton in a day.
^ The author evidently means pounds avoirdupois. — Ed.
^ Correspondence of Eli Whitney. In American Historical Review (New York,
1898), III, 99-101.
226 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
New Haven, Sept. nth, 1793.
Dear Parent, — I received your letter of the i6th of August
with peculiar satisfaction and delight. It gave me no small pleasure
to hear of your health and was very happy to be informed that your
health and that of the family has been so good since I saw you. I
have fortunately just heard from you by Mr. Robbinson who says
you were well when he left Westboro. When I wrote you last I
exp>ected to have been able to come to Westboro' sooner than I now
fear will be in my power. I presume, sir, you are desirous to hear
how I have spent my time since I left College. This I conceive you
have a right to know and that it is my duty to inform you and should
have done it before this time ; but I thought I could do it better by
verbal communication than by writing, and expecting to see you soon,
I omitted it. As I now have a safe and direct opportunity to send
by Mr. Robbinson, I will give you a sumary account of my southern
expedition.
I went from N. York with the family of the late Major General
Greene to Georgia. I went immediately with the family to their
Plantation about twelve miles from Savannah with an expectation
of spending four or five days and then proceed into Carolina to take
the school as I have mentioned in former letters. During this time
I heard much said of the extreme difficulty of ginning Cotton, that is,^
seperating it from its seeds. There were a number of very respectable '
Gentlemen at Mrs. Greene's who all agreed that if a machine could
be invented which would clean the cotton with expedition, it would
be a great thing both to the Country and to the inventor. I involun-
tarily happened to be thinking on the subject and struck out a plan
of a Machine in my mind, which I communicated to Miller, (who is
agent to the Executors of Genl. Greene and resides in the family, a
man of respectibility and property) he was pleased with the Plan
and said if I would pursue it and try *an experiment to see if it would
answer, he would be at the whole expense, I should loose nothing but
my time, and if I succeeded we would share the profits. Previous
to this I found I was like to be disappointed in my school, that is,
instead of a hundred, I found I could get only fifty Guineas a year.
I however held the refusal of the school untill I tried some experiments.
In about ten Days I made a little model, for which I was offered, if I
would give up all right and title to it, a Hundred Guineas. I concluded
to relinquish my school and turn my attention to perfecting the
Machine. I made one before I came away which required the labor
of one man to turn it and with which one man will clean ten times as
AGRICULTURE, SLAVERY AND INTERNAL TRADE 227
much cotton as he can in any other way before known and also
cleanse it much better than in the usual mode.^ This machine may
be turned by water or with a horse, with the greatest ease, and one
man and a horse will do more than fifty men with the old machines.
It makes the labor fifty times less, without throwing any class of
People out of business.
I returned to the Northward for the purpose of having a machine
made on a large scale and obtaining a Patent for the invintion. . . .
How advantageous this business will eventually prove to me, I cannot
say. It is generally said by those who know anything about it, that
I shall make a Fortune by it. I have no expectation that I shall make
an independent fortune by it, but think I had better pursue it than
any other business into which I can enter. Something which cannot
be foreseen may frustrate my expectations and defeat my Plan; but
I am now so sure of success that ten thousand dollars, if I saw the
money counted out to me, would not tempt me to give up my right
and relinquish the object. I wish you, sir, not to show this letter
nor communicate anything of its contents to any body except My
Brothers and Sister, enjoining it on them to keep the whole a pro-
found secret. . . .
With respects to Mama ^ I am,
kind Parent, your most obt. Son
Mr. Eli Whitney. Eli Whitney, Junr.
F. Effect of the Cotton Gin upon Export of Cotton, lygi-iSii^,
As soon as it became possible to clean cotton quickly and cheaply, a rapidly
growing export trade sprang up, most of it with England.
In 1790, the growth of American cotton wool was problematical.
The extent to which the production of this raw material has been
subsequently carried, enriched the nation, and very much contrib-
uted to lessen the demand for slaves. Prior to 1790, the Dutch
settlements in Surinam, and other parts of the West Indies, were
considered as the countries, from which the manufactories in the
^ In a letter to Jefferson, dated Nov. 24, 1793, Whitney stated that with this
machine "it is the stated task of one negro to clean fifty weight (I mean fifty
pounds after it is seperated from the seed), of the green seed cotton per day."
Olmsted, Memoir of Eli Whitney, Esq., p. 17.
2 Eli Whitney's step-mother. His own mother died while he was still a young
lad.
' Statistical Annals . . . of the United States of America. By Adam
Seybert (Philadelphia, 1818), 92.
228 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
United States might be supplied with cotton wool. In 1791, the
first parcel of cotton, of American growth, was exported from the
United States, and amounted only to 19,200 lbs.! The cotton wool
of the growth of the United States, exported in 1809-10, amounted
to 93,361,462 lbs.; besides, in that year, it has been estimated that
16,000,000 lbs. were consumed in our manufactories. Calculated on
the average of the six years, from 1806 to 181 1, there was annually
imported into Great Britain from the United States, 34,568,487 lbs.*
and in 181 1, 46,872,4^,2 lbs. Calculated on the average of the five
years, from 1805 to 1809, there was annually imported into Great
Britain from all parts of the world, 69,181,885 Ibs.^ In 1755, the
cotton manufacture, in England, was ranked '^ amongst the humblest
of the domestic arts;" the products of this branch, were then almost
entirely for home consumption; in 1797, it took the lead of all the
other manufactures in Great Britain, and in 1809, gave employment
to 800,000 persons, and its annual value was estimated at £30,000,000
sterling, or 132,000,000 dollars!
G. Agriculture in the Carolinas and Georgia ^ 1802 ^
The decline in the profitableness of indigo and tobacco had brought the a;
culture of this section into a transitional period of its development. If the cott(
gin had not been invented they might have developed mixed farming. As it w
however, South Carolina and Georgia turned eagerly to this new crop, and in 180:
produced three quarters of all that was grown in the United States, the remaind
coming from North Car61ina and Virginia. In South Carolina, rice was still culti-i
vated, though not so generally.
The two Carolinas and Georgia are naturally divided into thi
upper and lower countries, but the upper embraces a great
extent. . . .
Through the whole of the country the nature of the soil is adapt
for the growth of wheat, rye, and Indian corn. Good land produo
upward of twenty bushels of Indian wheat per acre, which is comnionlN
worth about half a dollar per bushel. A general consumption ij
made of it for the support of the inhabitants since, except those whci
are of German origin, there are very few, as we have before remarked i
that make use of wheaten bread. The growth of corn is very ciri
' Najtal Chronicle, for 181 1, p. 281.
• MoniUy Magazine, vol. xxx, p. 115. In 1705, only 1,170,881 lbs. of cotloi
wool were Imported into England. In 1810, Sir Robert Peel stated, in the Hous
of Commons, that 135,000,000 lbs. had been imported that year!
• Tro9ds to the Westward of Uie Allegany MoutUains. By F. A. Michau
(London, 1805), 378, 388.
AGRICULTURE, SLAVERY AND INTERNAL TRADE 229
cumscribed, and the small quantity of flour that is exported to
Charleston and Savannah is sold fifteen per cent, cheaper than that
imported from Philadelphia.
The low price to which tobacco is fallen in Europe within these
few years, has made them give up the culture of it in this part of the
country. That of green-sea cotton has resumed its place, to the great
advantage of the inhabitants, many of whom have since made their
fortunes by it. The separation of the seed from the felt that en-
velops them is a tedious operation, and which requires many hands,
is now simplified by a machine for which the inventor has obtained
a patent from the federal government. . . .
The best rice plantations are established in the great swamps,
that favour the watering of them when convenient. The harvests
are abundant there, and the rice that proceeds from them, stripped
of its husk, is larger, more transparent, and is sold dearer than that
which is in a drier soil, where they have not the means or facility of
irrigation. The culture of rice in the southern and maritime part
of the United States has greatly diminished within these few years;
it has been in a great measure replaced by that of cotton, which affords
greater profit to the planters, since they compute a good cotton har-
vest equivalent to two of rice. The result is, that many rice fields
have been transformed into those of cotton, avoiding as much as
possible the water penetrating.
III. Slavery
A. Poor Whites and Slaves in Virginia, lySo ^
The position of the poor white, in a community where most of the labor was
performed by negro slaves, was a difficult one, and the problem to which it gave
rise became more important in a later period. But even at this earlier date, his
lot in a state like Virginia could arouse the attention of an intelligent and sympa-
thetic observer like Chastellux. This writer was a French officer who served
in the Revolution.
. . . But if Reason ought to blush at beholding such prejudices
so strongly established amongst a new people. Humanity has still
more to suffer from the state of poverty, in which a great number of
white people lives in Virginia. It is in this country that I saw poor
persons, for the first time, after I passed the sea; for, in the midst of
those rich plantations, where the negro alone is wretched, miserable
huts are often to be met with, inhabited by whites, whose wane looks,
^ Travels in North America, in the Years 1780, 1781, and 1782. By the Marquis
[F. J.] Chastellux (London, 1787), 190-9.
230 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
and ragged garments, bespeak poverty. At first I was puzzled to
explain to myself, how, in a country where there is still so much land
to clear, men who do not refuse to work should remain in misery;
but I have since learned, that all these useless territories, these im-
mense estates, with which Virginia is covered, have their proprietors.
Nothing is more common than to see some of them possessing five or
six thousand acres of land, who clear out only as much as their
negroes can cultivate; yet will they not give, or even sell the smallest
portion of them, because they form a part of their possessions, and
they are in hopes of one day augmenting the number of their negroes.
These white men, without fortune, and frequently without industry,
are straitened, therefore, on every side, and reduced to the small
number of acres they are able to acquire. Now, the land not being
good in general in America, especially in Virginia, a considerable
number of them is necessary, in order to clear it with success, because
they are the cattle from which the cultivator derives his aid and his
subsistence. To the eastward are a great number of cleared grounds,
but the portions of land which are easily purchased there, and for
almost nothing, consist always of at least two hundred acres; besides,
that to the southward, the climate is less healthy, and the new set-
tlers, without partaking of the wealth of Virginia, share all the incon-
veniences of the climate, ^nd even the indolence it inspires.
Beneath this class of inhabitants we must place the negroes, whose
situation would be still more lamentable, did not their natural in-
sensibility extenuate, in some degree, the suflferings annexed to
slavery. On seeing them ill-lodged, ill-cloathed, and often oppressed
with labour, I concluded that their treatment was as rigorous as;
elsewhere. I have been assured, however, that it is extremely mild.j
in comparison with what they suffer in the sugar colonies; ... j
I must likewise do the Virginians the justice to declare, that man>j
of them treat their negroes with great humanity. I must add'
likewise, a still more honourable testimony, that in general the)!
seem afflicted to have any slavery, and are constantly talking Oj
abolishing it, and of contriving some other means of cultivating thei i
estates. It is true that this opinion, which is almost generally re
ccived, is inspired by different motives. The philosophers, and thi
young men, who are almost all educated in the principles of a soun<l
phflosophy, regard nothing but justice and the rights of humanity
The fathers of families, and such as are principally occupied witj
schemes of interest, complain that the maintenance of their negrw,
is very expensive; that their labour is neither so productive nor Sj
AGRICULTURE, SLAVERY AND INTERNAL TRADE 231
cheap, as that of day labourers, or white servants; and, lastly, that
epidemical disorders, which are very common, render both their
property and their revenue extremely precarious.
B. Decline of Slavery, iy88 ^
Owing to the impossibility of employing slave labor in the staple industries of
the north, slavery was gradually dying out in that section. Even in the south,
with the decline in the profitableness of tobacco, there was a growing movement
in favor of abolition. Brissot's liberal philosophy and horror of the institution
of slavery led him at times into doubtful generaUzations.
Three distinct epochs mark the conduct of the Americans in this
business — the prohibition of the importation of slaves — their
manumission — and the provision made for their instruction. All
the different States are not equally advanced in these three objects.
In the Northern and Middle States, they have proscribed for
ever the importation of slaves; in others, this prohibition is limited
to a certain time. In South Carolina, where it was limited to three
years, it has lately been extended to three years more. Georgia
is the only State that continues to receive transported slaves. . . .
Slavery, my friend, has never polluted every part of the United
States. There was never any law in New Hampshire, or Massa-
chusetts, which authorized it. When, therefore, those States pro-
scribed it, they only declared the law as it existed, before. There
was very little of it in Connecticut; the puritanic austerity which
predominated in that colony, could scarcely reconcile itself with
slavery. Agriculture was better performed there by the hands of
freemen; and everything concurred to engage the people to give
liberty to the slaves: — so that almost everyone has freed them;
and the children of such as are not yet free, are to have their liberty
at twenty-five years of age.
The case of the Blacks in New- York is nearly the same; yet the
slaves there are more numerous.
It is because the basis of the population there is Dutch; that is
to say, people less disposed than any other to part with their property.
But liberty is assured there to all the children of the slaves, at a cer-
tain age. The State of Rhode-Island formerly made a great business
of the slave trade. It is now totally and for ever prohibited.
In New Jersey the bulk of the population is Dutch. You find
there, traces of that same Dutch spirit which I have described. Yet
^ New. Travels in the United States of America, performed in iy88. By J. P.
Brissot de Warville (Dublin, 1792), 270-81, passim.
232 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
the Western parts of the State are disposed to free their Negroes;
but the Eastern part are opposed to it. . . .
[In Pennsylvania in 1780] the General Assembly abolished slavery
for ever, forced the owners of slaves to cause them to be enregistered,
declared their children free at the age of twenty-eight years, placed
them, while under that age, on a footing of hired servants, assured
to them the benefit of trial by jury, &c. . . .
The little State of Delaware has followed the example of Penn-
sylvania. It is mostly peopled by Quakers — instances of giving
freedom are therefore numerous. . . .
With the State of Delaware finishes the system of protection to
the blacks. Yet there are some negroes freed in Maryland, because
there are some Quakers there; and you perceive it very readily, on
comparing the fields of tobacco or of Indian corn belonging to these
people with those of others; you see how much superior the hand of a
freeman is to that of a slave in the operations of industry.
When you run over Maryland and Virginia, you conceive yourself
in a different world; and you are convinced of it when you converse
with the inhabitants. They speak not here of projects for freeing
the negroes; they praise not the societies of London and America;
they read not the works of Clarkson — No, the indolent masters
behold with uneasiness, the efforts that are making to render freedom
universal. The Virginians are persuaded of the impossibility of cul-
tivating tobacco without slavery; they fear, that if the Blacks be-
come free, they will cause trouble; on rendering them free, they
know not what rank to assign them in society; whether they
shall establish them in a separate district, or send them out of the
country. These are the objections which you will hear repeated
every where against the idea of freeing them.
C. Slavery in the South, lyg^ ^ '
A rather favorable view of slavery is given by Weld, in spite of his dislike of the )
institution. In view of the internal slave trade which sprang up shortly after this
date between the exhausted tobacco plantations and the new cotton districts, his
statement that the former were overstocked with slaves is significant.
The principal planters in Virginia have nearly everything they
can want on their own estates. Amongst their slaves are found
taylors, shoemakers, carpenters, smiths, turners, wheelwrights,!
» Travels through the States of North America, atid the Provinces of Upper and
Lower Canada, during the Years lygs, lygd, and jygy. By Isaac Weld, Junioi
(London, 1800), 114-6.
I
AGRICULTURE, SLAVERY AND INTERNAL TRADE 233
weavers, tanners, &c. I have seen patterns of excellent coarse
woollen cloth made in the country by slaves, and a variety of cotton
manufactures, amongst the rest good nankeen. Cotton grows here
extremely well; the plants are often killed by frost in winter,
but they always produce abundantly the first year in which they are
sown. The cotton from which nankeen is made is of a particular
kind, naturally of a yellowish colour.
The large estates are managed by stewards and overseers, the
proprietors just amusing themselves with seeing what is going forward.
The work is done wholly by slaves, whose numbers are in this part of
the country more than double that of white persons. The slaves on the
large plantations are in general very well provided for, and treated with
mildness. During three months nearly, that I was in Virginia, but
two or three instances of ill treatment towards them came under my
observation. Their quarters, the name whereby their habitations
are called, are usually situated one or two hundred yards from the
dwelling house, which gives the appearance of a village to the resi-
dence of every planter in Virginia; when the estate, however, is so
large as to be divided into several farms, then separate quarters
are attached to the house of the overseer on each farm. Adjoining
their little habitations, the slaves commonly have small gardens and
yards for poultry, which are all their own property; they have ample
time to attend to their own concerns, and their gardens are generally
found well stocked, and their flocks of poultry numerous. Besides
the food they raise for themselves, they are allowed Hberal rations
of salted pork and Indian corn. Many of their little huts are com-
fortably furnished, and they are themselves, in general, extremely
well clothed. In short, their condition is by no means so wretched
as might be imagined. They are forced to work certain hours in
the day ; but in return they are clothed, dieted, and lodged comfort-
ably, and saved all anxiety about provision for their offspring. . . .
The number of the slaves increases most rapidly, so that there is
scarcely any estate but what is overstocked. This is a circumstance
complained of by every planter, as the maintenance of more than are
requisite for the culture of the estate is attended with great expence.
Motives of humanity deter them from selling the poor creatures,
or turning them adrift from the spot where they have been born and
brought up, in the midst of friends and relations.
What I have here said respecting the condition and treatment
of slaves, appertains, it must be remembered, to those only who
are upon the large plantations in Virginia; the lot of such as are
234 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
unfortunate enough to fall into the hands of the lower class of white
people, and of hard taskmasters in the towns, is very different. In
the Carolinas and Georgia again, slavery presents itself in very
different colours from what it does even in its worst form in Virgmia.
IV. Pioneering and Agriculture in the West
A. Land the Lodestone to the West, 1^72-1774 ^
The westward movement began after the Seven Years' War had removed the
fear of attack from the French and Indians. The father of Joseph Doddridge
took his family west when the children were small, so that the author of the book,
from which this extract is taken, grew up in the pioneer settlements which he
describes. The Reverend Joseph Doddridge was an itinerant Methodist preacher.
The Settlements on this side of the mountains commenced along
the Monongahela, and between that river and the Laurel Ridge, in th^
year 1772. In the succeeding year they reached the Ohio river. The
greater number of the first settlers came from the upper parts of thci
then colonies of Maryland, and Virginia. Braddock's trail, as it wj
called, was the rout by which the greater number of them crossed thd
mountains. A less number of them came by the way of Bedford
and Fort Ligonier, the military road from Pennsylvania to Pitts-
burgh. They effected their removals on horses furnished with pack-
saddles. This was the more easily done, as but few of these early
adventurers into the wilderness were encumbered with much baggage.
Land was the object which invited the greater number of these
people to cross the mountain, for as the saying then was, ''It was to
be had here for taking up;" that is, building a cabin and raising a
crop of grain, however small, of any kind, entitled the occupant to
four hundred acres of land, and a preemption right to one thousand
acres more adjoining, to be secured by a land office warrant. This
right was to take effect if there happened to be so much vacant land
or any part thereof, adjoining the tract secured by the settlement right.
B. Pioneering in Kentucky , lySo-iygo ^
The first permanent settlements in Kentucky were made about 1780, and ten
years later there were probably a hundred thousand persons in that territor>
was a favorite destination for the early western pioneers, as it was easily re;t>
by the Cumberland Gap. Imlay emigrated to that country after serving as .
captain in the Revolutionary army, and there became a deputy surveyor.
* NoUs, on ike SeUUmetU and Indian Wars, of the Western Parts of Virginu
and Pennsylvania. By Jos. Doddridge (Wellsl)urgh, Va., 1824), 99-100.
• A Topographical Description of the Western Territory of North A merica. B':
G. ImUy (New York, 1793), I, 133-6. 1
AGRICULTURE, SLAVERY AND INTERNAL TRADE 235
Under such circumstances, the first settlement of Kentucky was
formed, which soon opened a considerable quantity of land in the
county of Lincoln, which lies in the upper part of the state, and con-
tiguous to the wilderness, which ends in this delectable region.
As the country gained strength, the stations began to break up
in that part of the country, and their inhabitants to spread them-
selves, and settle upon their respective estates. But the embarass-
ment they were in for most of the conveniences of life, did not admit
of their building any other houses but of logs, and of opening fields in
the most expeditious way for planting the Indian corn; the only
grain which was cultivated at that time.
A log-house is very soon erected, and in consequence of the friendly
disposition which exists among those hospitable people, every neigh-
bour flew to the assistance of each other upon occasions of emergen-
cies. Sometimes they were built of round logs entirely, covered with
rived ash shingles, and the interstices stopped with clay, or lime and
sand, to keep out the weather. The next object was to open the
land for cultivation. There is very little under-wood in any part of
this country, so that by cutting up the cane, and girdling the trees, you
are sure of a crop of corn. The fertility of the soil amply repays the
labourer for his toil; for if the large trees are not very numerous, and
a large proportion of them the sugar maple, it is very likely from this
imperfect cultivation, that the ground will yield from 50 to 60 bushel
of corn to the acre. The second crop will be more ample; and as the
shade is removed by cutting the timber away, great part of our land
will produce from seventy to one hundred bushels of corn from an
acre. This extraordinary fertility enables the farmer who has but
a small capital to increase his wealth in a most rapid manner (I mean
by wealth the comforts of life). His cattle and hogs will find suffi-
cient food in the woods, not only for them to subsist upon, but to
fatten them. His horses want no provender the greatest part of the
year except cane and wild clover; but he may afford to feed them
with corn the second year. His garden, with little attention, pro-
duces him all the culinary roots and vegetables necessary for his
table; and the prolific increase of his hogs and poultry, will furnish
him the second year, without fearing to injure his stock, with a plenty
of animal food; and in three or four years his stock of cattle and
sheep will prove sufficient to supply him with both beef and mutton;
and he may continue his plan at the same time of increasing his
stock of those useful animals. By the fourth year, provided he is
mdustrious, he may have his plantation in sufficient good order to
236 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
build a better house, which he can do either of stone, brick, or
a framed wooden building, the principal articles of which will cost
him little more than the labour of himself and domestics; and he may
readily barter or sell some part of the superfluous productions of his
farm, which it will by this time afford, and procure such things as he
may stand in need of for the completion of his building. Apples,
peaches, pears, &c., &c., he ought to plant when he finds a soil or
eligible situation to place them in, as that will not hinder, or in any
degree divert, him from the object of his aggrandizement. — I have
taken no notice of the game he might kill, as it is more a sacrifice of
time to an industrious man than any real advantage.
Such has been the progress of the settlement of this country from
dirty stations or forts, and smoaky huts, that it has expanded into
fertile fields, blushing orchards, pleasant gardens, luxuriant sugar
groves, neat and commodious houses, rising villages, and trading
towns. Ten years have produced a difference in the population and
comforts of this country, which to be pourtrayed in just colours would
appear marvellous. To have implicite faith or belief that such things
have happened, it is first necessary to be (as I have been) a spec-
tator of such events.
C. Live Stock Farming in Ohio, 1806 ^
There was very little money profit in farming in the new settlements of the west
as there was no adequate market for the produce, and the few markets that then
were, like New Orleans, were easily glutted. Cattle, moreover, had the advantagi
that they could be driven to market. The first cattle that were so markete<
were driven from Ohio to Baltimore in 1805, and this proved the beginning of ;
profitable trade. Ashe was an unfriendly and severe critic of the westeri
country and probably exaggerated the statement of Mr. Digby, who lived nea
Cincinnati. .
I learned from Mr. Digby (so he was called) that the best hi
could do in the Western country, or that any farmer could do, wa
just not to starve. The price of produce was so low and that of labou
so high, that very little profit attended the most laborious exertions Ci
industry. Indian com, in particular, carried a value so mean, tha
he never offered to sell it, and for his wheat, he made it into flouj
he could get but about three dollars per barrel, and even that ha(»
for the most part, to be taken in goods for which he had not alwa)
consumption or use. In consequence he was about to abandon ,
» Travds in America, performed in 1806. By Thomas Ashe (London, iSoi'
taor-i.
I
AGRICULTURE, SLAVERY AND INTERNAL TRADE 237
system so little advantageous, and take to grazing cattle, breeding
hogs, and rearing horses, for distant markets and foreign use, where
money was to be obtained, and profit equal to the extent and impor-
tance of the business. He had always reaped the benefit of this plan,
having sent his son in the spring of the year with a boat carrying two
hundred live hogs to New Orleans, where they sold all round at the
rate of twelve dollars per cwt. though they cost him nothing but the
expense of the voyage and some small attendance in the woods, where
they breed and maintain themselves all the year round.
V. Public Lands
A. Democratic Land Holding, I/'qj ^
One of the striking effects of the westward movement was the growth of
democracy, both political and economic. In the West there was essential equality
of fortunes and of education. This was a direct result of the equahty of oppor-
tunity offered to every settler by the cheap and almost free lands, which were
divided for the most part into small holdings.
The cultivated lands in this country [Shenandoah Valley] are
mostly parcelled out in small portions; there are no persons here, as
on the other side of the mountains, possessing large farms; nor are
there any eminently distinguished by their education or knowledge
from the rest of their fellow citizens. Poverty also is as much un-
known in this country as great wealth. Each man owns the house
he lives in and the land which he cultivates, and everyone
appears to be in a happy state of mediocrity, and unambitious of
a more elevated situation than what he himself enjoys.
B. Speculation in Public Lands, 1806 ^
In 1800 Congress adopted the credit system of selling land at the fixed price of
$2 an acre. Under this law only one-fourth of the purchase money had to be paid
down, the balance being paid in three annual installments. This led to consider-
able speculation and the purchase by venturesome individuals of larger amounts
of land than they could pay for. But, as Ashe points out, the factors were so numer-
ous which favored the rise in the value of land that speculation of this character
was very tempting.
By virtue of the treaty with the aboriginal confederacy and sub-
sequent purchases, Congress has become the proprietor of nearly
^ Travels through the States of North America, and the Provinces of Upper atid
Lower Canada, during the Years 1795, 1796, and 1797. By Isaac Weld, Junior
(4th edition, London, 1800), 170.
^ Travels in America, performed in 1806. By Thomas Ashe (London, 1808),
89-90.
238 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
all the fine lands in the state [Ohio]. I have mentioned where such
lands most abound, and should have stated that nearly one third
of the country is mountainous and ridgy, bog and morass, to such a
degree as not to be worth one cent per acre. The principal part of the
state of this character lies to the north-east, and east of the river
Scioto. The best land is to the west of that river, and continues
with few exceptions to the boundary westward of the Great Miami.
It is very necessary that purchasers at a distance should be aware
of this, as I have known several who bought in a distant market at
a good price come several thousand miles to take possession of a
sterile mountain or an unreclaimable swamp. The truth is, that no
person should buy who is not on the spot, or who has not a confidential
agent. The mode of sale adopted by Congress is highly commend-
able. The entire country is surveyed and divided into sections of
six hundred and forty acres each. A certain number of these sections
lying contiguous compose a township, and a certain number of town-
ships form a range. The sections are all numbered, and each number
sixteen in every township is reserved for the purpose of education
and the support of its professors. There are also reservations which
cannot be sold under eight dollars an acre; but every other acre of
Congress land is sold at two dollars an acre forever: and, to encour-
age settlers, the period of four years is allowed for the entire payment,
which commences one-fourth at the bargain, and the remainder at
three yearly instalments. This indulgence on the part of govern-
ment was most productive to a few sordid monopolizers, called land
jobbers or land speculators, who made large contracts for twenty
thousand to five hundred thousand acres of the best land and in the
best situations, and have already sold the greatest part at from three
to five dollars per acre. A meadow called the Rick-a-way plains.]
containing ten thousand acres free of wood, is advanced by one oil
these gentlemen, from the two dollars an acre to be paid by his con|
tract, to thirty dollars per acre, and a considerable part of it is alread>|
sold. The portion under cultivation has yielded one hundred anCj
ten bushels of corn, and fifty bushels wheat per acre. The land th<|
most sought after is on the Scioto, the Ohio, and the Miamis: 01
which situations the title of Congress is for the most part bought up
and the present owners demand for it from six to twelve dollars \)e*
acre. But if the land should be on a mill seat, or ])lace eligible fo
the site of a village or town, the prirc nii^rlit nn.f.t.il.lv ])e raised t.
one hundred dollars per acre.
Many local ch-cumstances someiimcs also umLc to raise the pi
.ruj
AGRICULTURE, SLAVERY AND INTERNAL TRADE 239
of certain lands. Such as their vicinity to improving towns; their
abundance of ship timber, the facihty of conveying it to builders'
yards, and their possession of the sugar-maple, cherry tree, sassafras,
cotton, and other plants. On the whole, I know of no speculation
so promising, as that of buying the remaining good lands, reserva-
tions, and all (except schools, reservations which are never to be sold)
from Congress at two dollars per acre, and of holding them for the
space of ten years; after that period no moderate land will be sold
under ten dollars per acre, and land of the first qualities and situation
will fetch fifty in general, and much more in particular, per acre.
The reasons for this are obvious; the lands of the Atlantic States are
not to be compared to these in point of fertility and every excellence;
the climate here is not worse, and the State tolerates no slavery.
C. Sale of Public Lands, i'/g6-i8i6 ^
The sales of the public lands of the United States are given in the following
table for the period 1796 to 1806.
SALES OF PUBLIC LANDS
Since the opening of the several land offices for the sale of lands
belonging to the United States, the following sums have been received
into the Treasury, each year from the proceeds of the sales of public
lands, viz. : —
Dolls. Cts. Dolls. Cts.
In 1796 4,836 13 In 1807 466,163 27
1797 83,540 60 1808 647,939 6
1798 11,963 II 1809 442,252 33
1799 1810 696,548 82
1800 443 75 1811 1,040,237 53
1801 167,726 6 1812 710,427 78
1802 188,628 2 1813 835,655 14
1803 165,675 69 1814 1,135,971 9
1804 487,526 79 1815 1,287,959 28
1805 540,193 80 1816 estimated at. . 1,500,000 00
1806 765,245 73
The whole number of acres sold at the different land offices,
north-west of the river Ohio, from the commencement of the sales,
to October ist, 1816, was seven millions fifty-four thousand six hun-
dred and eighty-nine; the whole purchase money, was $14,960,784.48,
and the balance due, at the latter period, was $4,511,202.85. . . .
^ A Statistical View of the Commerce of the United States of America. By Timothy
Pitkin (2d edition, New York, 181 7), 375.
240 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
VI. Internal Trade and Transportation
A. By Stage from Boston to Savannah, 1802 ^
Travel and trade were for the most part confined to the natural waterways,
with which the United States was so well supplied. Indeed the very excellence
of these routes retarded the building of roads in the eastern states. When land
travel was necessary it was usually made on horseback. Owing to the badness
of the roads travel by stage did not become important until the beginning of the
nineteenth century. By 1802, however, roads had been built along the whole
Atlantic coast, and a little later stages were running from Philadelphia to Pitts-
burgh, a distance of over three hundred miles. Michaux was sent to this country
by the French government to study the forests of America, but did not confine
his observations to that subject.
Till the year 1802, the stages that set out at Philadelphia did not
go farther South than to Petersburg in Virginia, which is about three
hundred miles from Philadelphia; but in the month of March of
that year a new line of correspondence was formed between the
latter city and Charleston. The journey is about a fortnight, the
distance fifteen hundred miles, and the fare fifty piastres [dollars].
There are stages also between Philadelphia, New York, and Boston,
as well as between Charleston and Savannah, in Georgia, so that from
Boston to Savannah, a distance of twelve hundred miles, persons
may travel by the stages.
B. Traveling by Wagon, 1806 ^
If one could not make use of the fairly comfortable stage, then traveling took
on new terrors. The elliptical spring over the axles of wagons was not introduced
until 1825.
. . . The roads being bad at this season of the year, we could j
not procure the stage which otherwise runs upon this road. The;
waggon we hired is common in the States, and is used by the countrej
people to carry their provisions to market, or to transport goods froilii
one part of the country to the other. A great number are constant 1\
employed on the road between Skenesborough and Troy [N. Y.].
It is a long narrow cart upon four wheels, and drawn by two horses
abreast. When used as a stage for travelling, a couple of chairs arel
placed in it: but it is a very rough method of riding; for the waggon
* Travels to the Westward of the Allegany Mountains. By F. A. Michaus
(London, 1805), 2sn.
' Travels through Canada, and the United States of North America, in the Yean
1806, 1807, fir t8o8. By John Lambert (2d edition, London, 1814), II, 26 :
AGRICULTURE, SLAVERY AND INTERNAL TRADE 241
has no springs, and a traveller ought to have excellent nerves to endure
the shaking and jolting of such a vehicle over bad roads.
C. Bad Roads in 18 10 ^
Practically the only good roads in the United States in 1810 were the turn-
pikes, built and maintained by private companies and on which tolls were charged.
As soon as the traveler left* these improved thoroughfares, the roads became
execrable. The account given in the sprightly journal of Miss D wight is prob-
ably not exaggerated.
Mansfield — N J — Sat — morn October 27 [18 10] —
We yesterday travell'd the worst road you can imagine — over
mountains & thro' vallies — We have not I believe, had 20 rods of
level ground the whole day — and the road some part of it so intol-
erably bad on every account, so rocky & so gullied, as to be almost
impassable — 15 miles this side of Morristown, we cross'd a mountain
call'd Schyler or something like it —
. . . After we left Mansfield, we cross'd the longest hills, and
the worst road, I ever saw — two or three times after riding a little
distance on turnpike, we found it fenced across & were oblig'd to turn
into a wood where it was almost impossible to proceed — large trees
were across, not the road for there was none, but the only place we
could possibly ride — It appear'd to me, we had come to an end of
the habitable part of the globe — but all these difficulties were at
last surmounted, & we reach'd the Delaware — The river where it
is cross'd, is much smaller than I suppos'd — The bridge over it is
elegant I think — It is covered & has 16 windows each side — As
soon as we pass'd the bridge, we enter'd Easton, the first town in
Pennsylvania — It is a small but pleasant town — the houses are
chiefly small, & built of stone — very near together — The meeting
house. Bank, & I think, market, are all of the same description —
There are a few very handsome brick houses, & some wooden build-
ings— From Easton, we came to Bethlehem, which is 12 miles dis-
tant from it — . . .
D. Traveling from the East to Kentucky, lygj ^
The routes to the west lay through the mountains, and of these that through
the Cumberland Gap was the one earliest and most generally used. The easier
^ A Journey \_fr07n Connecticut^ to Ohio in 1810 as recorded in the Journal of
Margaret Van Horn Dwight (New Haven, 191 2), 13, 18. Printed by permission
of the editor, M, Farrand, and the publisher, Yale University Press.
2 A Topographical Description of the Western Territory of North America. By
G. Imlay (New York, 1793), I, 140-5.
242 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
approaches, now followed to the north by the Erie Canal or to the south around the
end of the Appalachian mountain chain, were in each case blocked by Indian tribes.
It was a dilVicult and even a dangerous journey, but once the rivers on the other
side of the mountains were reached, it became much easier. Imlay was a resident
of Kentucky and had himself made the joUmey more than once.
'Travellers or emigrants take different methods of transporting
their baggage, goods, or furniture from the places they may be at
to the Ohio, according to circumstances or their object in coming to
the country. For, instance, if a man is travelling only for curiosity,
or has no family or goods to remove, his best way would be to pur-
chase horses, and take his route through the Wilderness; but provided
he has a family, or goods of any sort to remove, his best way, then,
would be to purchase a waggon and team of horses to carry his
property to Redstone Old Fort, or to Pittsburg, according as he
may come from the northern or southern States. A good waggon
will cost at Philadelphia about lol. (I shall reckon everything in
sterling money for your greater convenience) and the horses about
12 1. each; they would cost something more at Baltimore and Alex-
andria. The waggon may be covered with canvas, and if it is the
choice of the people, they may sleep in it at nights with the greatest
safety. But if they should dislike that, there are inns of accommo-
dation the whole distance on the different roads. To allow the horses
a plenty of hay and com would cost about i s. per diem, each horse;
supposing you purchase your forage in the most oeconimical manner,
i. e. of the farmers, as you pass along, from time to time as you may
want it, and carry it in your waggon; and not of innkeepers, who
must have their profits. The provisions for the family I would pur-
chase in the same manner; and by having two or three camp kettles,
and stopping every evening when the weather is fine upon the brink
of some rivulet, and by kindling a fire they may soon dress their
food. There is no impediment to these kind of things, it is common
and may be done with the greatest security; and I would recommend
all persons who wish to avoid expence as much as possible to adopt
this plan. True, the charges at inns on those roads are remark-
ably reasonable, but I have mentioned those particulars as there
are many unfortunate people in the world, to whom the saving of every
shilling is an object, and as this manner of journeying is so far from
being disagreeable, that in a fine season it is extremely pleasant.
Provisions in those countries are very cheap, beef, mutton, and
pork, are something less than 2 d. per lb.; dunghill fowls are from 4 d.
to6d '"h '!"rk, 8d.; geese and turkeys, 1 s. 3d.; butter. ' '^ ■
AGRICULTURE, SLAVERY AND INTERNAL TRADE 243
cheese, I will say nothing about, as there is very little good until you
arrive in Kentucky. Flour is about 12 s. 6 d. per cwt.
The best way is to carry their tea and coffee from the place they
may set out at; good green tea will be from 4 s. 6 d. to 6 s. per lb.;
souchong from 3 s. to 5 s. ; coffee will cost from i s. 3 d. to i s. 6 d. per
lb.; loaf sugar from 7 d. to 10 d. But I would not recommend their
carrying much sugar, for as the back country is approached, the maple
sugar is in abundance, and may be bought from 4 d. to 6 d. per lb.
Such are the expenses to be incurred travelling to this country by
Redstone and Pittsburg.
The distance which one of those waggons may travel one day
with another is little short of twenty miles. So that it will be a
journey from Alexandria to Redstone Old Fort of eleven or twelve
days, from Baltimore a day or two longer, and from Philadelphia
to Pittsburg I should suppose it would require nearly twenty days;
as the roads are not so good as from the two former places.
From these prices the expence of moving a family, from either
of the sea ports I have mentioned to the Ohio, may be computed with
tolerable exactitude.
The best time for setting out for this country from any of the
Atlantic ports, is the latter end of either September or April. The
autumn is the most eligible of the two; as it is most likely that the
roads across the mountains will be drier, and provisions and forage
are then both more plentiful and cheap than in the spring.
If this mode should not suit the convenience of the party, by reason
of their not wanting a waggon or horses when they arrive in this
country, they may have their goods brought out to Redstone Old
Fort from Alexandria for 15 s. per cwt. and in like proportion from
Baltimore and Philadelphia.
At Redstone Old Fort, or Pittsburg, they can either buy a boat,
which will cost them about 5 s. per ton, or freight their goods to
Kentucky for about i s. per cwt. There is no regular business of
this sort; but as there are always boats coming down the river, i s.
per cwt. is the common charge for freight. But more frequently
when there is boat room to spare, it is given to such as are not able
to purchase a boat, or have not a knowledge of the navigation. How-
ever, that is a business which requires no skill, and there are always
numbers of people coming down, who will readily conduct a boat
for the sake of a passage.
The distance from Philadelphia by land to Kentucky is between
seven and eight hundred miles; from Baltimore nearly seven hundred;
244 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
nearly six hundred from Alexandria; and upwards of five hundred
from Richmond.
E. Trade dorum the Mississippi River, lyg^ *
As the population grew in the western country they began to produce a surplus
which they sent to market in exchange for the manufactured commodities of the
East or of Europe. The bulky and heavy agricultural products or raw materials
of the western settlements were usually sent downstream to the New Orleans
market, while they drew their supplies overland from the seaboard cities.
The people in Pittsburgh, and the western country along the
waters of the Ohio, draw their supplies from Philadelphia and Balti-
more; but they send the productions of the country, which would
be too bulky for land carriage, down the Ohio and Mississippi to
New Orleans. From Pittsburgh to New Orleans, the distance is
two thousand, one hundred and eighty-three miles. On an average
it takes about twenty-eight days to go down there with the stream;
but to return by water it takes from sixty days to three months.
The passage back is very laborious as well as tedious; on which
account they seldom think of bringing back boats which are sent
down from Pittsburgh, but on arriving at New Orleans they are
broken up, and the plank sold. These boats are built on the cheapest
construction, and expressly for the purpose of going down stream.
The men get back the best way they can, generally in ships bound
from New Orleans to the southern states, and from thence home by
land. Now, if the passage from the Ohio to the Patowmac is opened,
it cannot be supposed that the people in Pittsburgh and the vicinity
will continue thus to send the produce down to Orleans, from whence
they cannot bring anything in return; they will naturally send to
the federal city, from whence they can draw the supplies they are in
want of, and which is so much nearer to them, that when the naviga-
tion b perfected it will be possible to go there and back again in the
same time that it requires merely to go down to New Orleans.
F. Trade along the Western Rivers, 1802 *
A dear and graphic picture of western trade at the beginning of the nineteenth
century is given us by Michaux, with his accustomed accuracy and attention to
details. The reasons for the importance of Pittsburg and of New Orleans become
very evident from a study of western trade.
» Travels though the States of North America, and the Provinces of Upper and
Lower Canada, during the Years lygs, 1796, and 1797. By Isaac Weld, Junior
(4ib edition, London, 1800), 66-7.
• Travels to the Westward of the Allegany Mountains. By F. A. Michaux
(London, \%oO, 6a-i, 90.
AGRICULTURE, SLAVERY AND INTERNAL TRADE 245
Pittsburgh has been long considered by the Americans as the key
to the western country. . . .
However, though this town has lost its importance as a military
post it has acquired a still greater one in respect to commerce. It
serves as a staple for the different sorts of merchandise that Phila-
delphia and Baltimore send, in the beginning of spring and autumn,
for supplying the states of Ohio, Kentucky, and the settlement of
Natches.
The conveyance of merchandise from Philadelphia to Pittsburgh
is made in large covered waggons, drawn by four horses, two a-breast.
The price of carrying goods varies according to the season; but in
general it does not exceed six piasters [dollars] the quintal. They
reckon it to be three hundred miles from Philadelphia to Pittsburgh,
and the carriers generally make it a journey of from twenty to twenty-
four days. The price of conveyance would not be so high as it really
is, were it not that the waggons frequently return empty; notwith-
standing they sometimes bring back, on their return to Philadelphia
or Baltimore, fur skins that come from Illinois or Ginseng, which is
very common in that part of Pennsylvania.
Pittsburgh is not only the staple of Philadelphia and Baltimore
trade with the western country, but of the numerous settlements that
are formed on the Monongahela and Alleghany. The territorial
produce of that part of the country finds an easy and advantageous
conveyance by the Ohio and Mississippi. Corn, hams and dried
pork are the principal articles sent to New Orleans, whence they are
re-exported into the Carribbees. They also export for the consump-
tion of Louisiana, bar-iron, coarse linen, bottles manufactured at
Pittsburgh, whiskey, and salt butter. A great part of these provi-
sions come from Redstone, a small commercial town, situated upon
the Monongahela, about fifty miles beyond Pittsburgh. . . .
The inhabitants of Marietta were the first that had an idea of
exporting directly to the Carribbee Islands the produce of the country,
in a vessel built in their own town, which they sent to Jamaica. The
success which crowned this first attempt excited such emulation among
the inhabitants of that part of the Western Country, that several
new vessels were launched at Pittsburgh and Louisville, and expe-
dited to the isles, or to New York and Philadelphia. The shipyard
at Marietta is situated near the town, on the Great Muskingum.
When I was there they were building three brigs, one of which was
of two hundred and twenty tons burthen.
246 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
G. Trade at Pittsburg, 1803 ^
Baltimore and Philadelphia were the great markets from which supplies were
sent west ; Pittsburg owed its importance to the fact that it was situated at the head
of navigation on the Ohio River and hence was the distributing center for the whole
western region. New Orleans, at the mouth of the Mississippi River, was the natu-
ral receiving station for produce that was sent downstream. Harris was a resident
of Ma^chusetts who made a journey to the west for the sake of regaining his
health.*
Dry goods in general are sold nearly as cheap as at Baltimore;
other goods, are, on account of the carriage, which is four dollars
fifty cents from Baltimore and five dollars pr. 100 lbs. from Phila-
delphia proportionably higher. The merchants here, as well as those
of the western countrj^, receive their goods from Philadelphia and
Baltimore; but a small part of the trade being given to New- York
and Alexandria. The terms of credit are generally from nine to twelve
months. The produce which they receive of the farmers is sent to
New Orleans; the proceeds of which are remitted to the Atlantic
States, to meet their payments.
Most of the articles of merchandize brought in waggons over the
mountains in the summer season, and destined for trade down the
river, are stored at this place to be ready for embarkation. With
these a great many trading boats are laden, which float do^vn the
river, stopping at the towns on its banks to vend the articles. In a
country, so remote from commerce, and of so great extent, where each
one resides on his own farm, and has neither opportunity nor conve-
nience for visiting a market, these trading boats contribute very much
to the accommodation of life, by bringing to every man's house those
little necessaries which it would be very troublesome to go a great
distance to procure.
H. Character of Western Trade, 1806 ^
Ashe gives an amusing though probably not altogether reliable account of the
trade that was carried on throughout the newer sections of the country. The
absence of money, and the resort to barter in carrying on trade, were characteristic
of the western as they had been of colonial trade. The money was sent back
East to buy more needed goods, and never could be kept in the West.
* The Journal of a Tour into the Territory Northwest of the Allegany Mountaitis;
Madt in the Spring of the Year i8oj. By Thaddeus Mason Harris (Boston, 1805),
« Travels in America, performed in 1806. By Thomas Ashe (London, 1808),
SI'S.
AGRICULTURE, SLAVERY AND INTERNAL TRADE 247
I do not conceive that I assert too much, though it may be sur-
prising to you, in saying, that the entire business of these waters is
conducted without the use of money. I have already enumerated
the produce; consisting chiefly of flour, corn, salt, cyder, apples, live
hogs, bacon, glass, earthenware, &c. I have also mentioned the
little towns and settlements along them. To such places persons
come from Baltimore and Philadelphia with British goods, which
they exchange for the above productions; charging on their articles
at least 300 per cent, and allowing the farmer and manufacturer but
very low terms for theirs. Some of these prices are as follows:
whiskey, two shillings a gallon; live hogs, two dollars and a half a
hundredweight; bacon, three dollars a hundredweight; flour, three
dollars a barrel; corn, a quarter-dollar a bushel; butter an eighth
of a dollar a pound; cyder, four dollars a barrel; native sugar, a
sixteenth of a dollar a pound; and so on in proportion, for any other
produce of the country. The storekeepers make two annual collec-
tions of these commodities; send them down the rivers to New
Orleans; and there receive an immense profit in Spanish dollars, or
bills on Philadelphia at a short date. They then purchase British
and West India goods of all kinds; send them by waggcns over the
mountains, to their stores in the western country, where they always
keep clerks; and again make their distributions and collections;
descend the waters; and return by the same circuitous mountainous
route, of at least 5650 miles, as nearly as can be calculated on an
average between the extreme head of the waters and Pittsburg, thus:
Miles
From each station to New Orleans 2300
From New Orleans to Philadelphia, by sea 3000
From Philadelphia back to each station, by the way of the
Alleghany mountains 350
Total 5650
A few, on receiving their cash at New Orleans, return by land through
the wilderness, Tennasee, and Kentucky, to their stations at and
above Pittsburg; but this is seldom done. The distance which is
thus performed is only 1300 miles.
These storekeepers are obliged to keep every article which it is
possible that the farmer and manufacturer may want. Each of their
shops exhibits a complete medley; a magazine where are to be had
both a needle and an anchor, a tin pot and a large copper boiler, a
child's whistle and a pianoforte, a ring dial and a clock, a skein of
thread and trimmings of lace, a check frock and a muslin gown, a
248 READliNGb IN ECUNOxMlC lllbTORV
frieze coat and a superfine cloth, a glass of whiskey and a barrel of
brandy, a gill of vinegar and a hogshead of Madeira wine, &c. Hence
you will perceive that money is not always necessary as a circulating
medium: however, as farmers and manufacturers advance in busi-
ness, and find their produce more than equal to the wants of their
families, they contract with the storekeeper to receive the annual
balance of the latter, either in cash or in land to an equal amount;
for though no person cultivates a tenth part of the land that lu
possesses, everyone is animated with the rage of making further
accessions. Thus the great landholders ultimately absorb all the
hard money; and as they principally reside in the large towns on
the Atlantic States, the money finds its way back to those, and leaves
many places here without a single dollar. This is productive of dis-
tressing incidents to small farmers who supply the markets with
provisions; for whatever they have to sell, whether trivial or important,
they receive in return nothing but an order on a store for the value in
goods; and as the wants of such persons are few, they seldom know
what articles to take. The storekeepers turn this circumstance to
advantage, and frequently force on the customer a thing for which he
has no use; or, what is worse, when the order is trifling, tell him to
sit down at the door and drink the amount if he chooses. As this
is often complied with, a market day is mostly a scene of drunkenness
and contention, fraud, cunning, and duplicity; the storekeeper deny-
ing the possession of a good article, till he fails in imposing a bad one.
I have known a person to ask for a pair of shoes, and receive for
answer that there were no shoes in the store, but some capital gin that
could be recommended to him. I have heard another ask for a rifle
gun, and be answered that there were no rifles, but that he could be
accomodated with the best Dutch looking glasses and German flutes
in the western country. Another was directed by his wufe to bring
her a warming pan, smoothing irons, and scrubbing brushes; but
these were denied; and a wooden cuckoo-clock, which the children
would not take a week to demolish, was sent home in their stead.
I could not help smiling at these absurdities, though I believe they
deserve the name of impositions, till an incident reduced me to the
condition of those whom I have just described. I rode an excellent
horse to the head of the waters; and finding him of no further use
from my having to take boat there, I proposed selling him to the best
bidder. I was offered in exchange for him salt, flour, hogs, land.
cast-iron salt pans, Indian corn, whiskey, — in short, everything but
what I wanted, which was money. The highest offer made, was
AGRICULTURE, SLAVERY AND INTERNAL TRADE 249
cast-iron salt pans to the amount of a hundred and thirty dollars.
I asked the proprietor of this heavy commodity, how much cash he
would allow me instead of such an incumbrance; his answer was,
without any shame or hesitation, forty dollars at most. I preferred
the pans ; though they are to be exchanged again for glass bottles at
Pittsburg, tobacco or hemp in Kentucky, and dollars in New Orleans.
These various commercial processes may occupy twelve months; nor
am I then certain of the amount, unless I give 30 per cent, to
secure it.
The words buy and sell are nearly unknown here; in business
nothing is heard but the word trade. ''Will you trade your watch,
your gun, pistols, horses? &c." means, ''Will you exchange your watch,
gun, &c. for corn, pigs, cattle, Indian meal? &c." But you must
anticipate all this from the absence of money.
I. The Peddler as a Distributor of Goods ^ lygy ^
When means of transportation were poor and expensive and markets were local,
the peddler performed a very useful service in distributing manufactured goods
to consumers in regions far removed from the points of production. A graphic
picture is given by Dwight, who later became president of Yale College.
The inhabitants of this village [Berlin, Conn.] make great quan-
tities of tin ware; or untensils, formed of tinned plates. As this
species of manufacture, on the Western side of the Atlantic, probably
commenced here; I will give you an account of the manner, in which
it was introduced. . . .
For many years, after tinned plates were manufactured in this
place into culinary vessels, the only method used by the pedlars for
conveying them to distant towns, for sale, was by means of a horse
and two baskets, balanced on his back. After the war, carts and
waggons were used for this purpose, and have, from that time to the
present, been the only means of conveyance which have been adopted.
The manner, in which this ware is disposed of, puts to flight all
calculation. A young man is furnished by the proprietor with a
horse, and a cart covered with a box, containing as many tin vessels,
as the horse can conveniently draw. This vehicle within a few years
has, indeed, been frequently exchanged for a waggon; and then the
load is doubled. Thus prepared, he sets out on an expedition for
the winter. A multitude of these young men direct themselves to
the Southern States; and in their excursions travel wherever they
^ Travels in New England and New York. By Timothy Dwight (London, 1823),
11, 43-4-
25© READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
can find settlements. Each of them walks, and rides, alternately,
through this vast distance, till he reaches Richmond, Newbern,
Charleston, or Savannah; and usually carries with him to the place
of his destination no small part of the gain, which he has acquired
upon the road. Here he finds one or more workmen, who have
been sent forward to co-operate with him, furnished with a sufficient
quantity of tinned plates to supply him with all the ware which he can
sell during the season. With this he wanders into the interior
country; calls at every door on his way; and with an address, and
pertinacity, not easily resisted, compels no small number of the in-
habitants to buy. At the commencement of the summer they return
to New- York; and thence to New-Haven, by water; after selling
their vehicles, and their horses. The original load of a single horse,
as I am told, is rarely worth more than three hundred dollars; or of a
waggon, more than six hundred. Yet this business is said to yield
both the owner and his agent valuable returns; and the profit to be
greater than that, which is made by the sale of any other merchandize
of equal value. Even those, who carry out a single load, and dispose
of it in the neighbouring country find their employment profitable.
In this manner considerable wealth has been accumulated in Worth-
ington, and in several towns in its vicinity.
Every inhabited part of the United States is visited by these men.
I have seen them on the peninsula of Cape Cod, and in the neigh-
bourhood of Lake Erie; distant from each other more than six hun-
dred miles. They make their way to Detroit, four hundred miles
farther; to Canada; to Kentucky; and, if I mistake not, to New-
Orleans and St. Louis. . . .
J. The Invention of the Steamboat, i8oy ^
Although several other American inventors had succeeded in propelling vessels
through the water by means of steam, Fulton was the first to make a commercially <|
■ucceasful steamboat. The sailing of the Clermont up the Hudson in 1807 marked
the real beginning of steamboat navigation in the United States, and introduced,
a new epoch in transportation.
FIRST LETTER
I arrived this afternoon at four o'clock in the steamboat from
Albany. As the success of my experiment gives me great hopes that
such boats may be rendered of great importance to my country, to
prevent erroneous opinions and give some satisfaction to my friends
* TvfO Letters. By Robert Fulton. Reprinted in Epochs of American History.
Edited by F. W. Halaey (New York, 1912), IV, 195-6.
AGRICULTURE, SLAVERY AND INTERNAL TRADE 251
of useful improvements, you will have the goodness to publish the
following statement of facts:
I left New York on Monday at one o'clock and arrived at Cler-
mont, the seat of Chancellor Livingston, at one o'clock on Tuesday:
time, twenty-four hours; distance, one hundred and ten miles. On
Wednesday I departed from the Chancellor's at nine in the morning,
and arrived at Albany at five in the afternoon: distance, forty miles;
time, eight hours. The sum is one hundred and fifty miles in thirty-
two hours, equal to near five miles an hour.
On Thursday, at nine o'clock in the morning, I left Albany, and
arrived at the Chancellor's at six in the evening. I started from thence
at seven, and arrived at New York at four in the afternoon: time,
thirty hours; space run through, one hundred and fifty miles, equal
to five miles an hour. Throughout my whole way, both going and
returning, the wind was ahead. No advantage could be derived from
my sails. The whole has therefore been performed by the power of
the steam-engine.
SECOND LETTER
My steamboat voyage to Albany and back has turned out rather
more favorably than I had calculated. The distance from New York
to Albany is one hundred and fifty miles. I ran it up in thirty-two
hours, and down in thirty. I had a light breeze against me the whole
way, both going and coming; and the voyage has been performed
wholly by the power of the steam-engine. I overtook many sloops
and schooners beating to windward, and parted with them.
The power of propelling boats by steam is now fully proved.
The morning I left New York there were not perhaps thirty persons
in the city who believed that the boat would ever move one mile an
hour or be of the least utility; and, while we were putting off from
the wharf, which was crowded with spectators, I heard a number of
sarcastic remarks. This is the way in which ignorant men com-
pliment what they call philosophers and projectors.
Having employed much time, money, and zeal in accomplishing
this work, it gives me, as it will you, great pleasure to see it answer
my expectations. It will give a cheap and quick conveyance to the
merchandize on the Mississippi, Missouri, and other great rivers,
which are now laying open their treasures to the enterprise' of our
countrymen; and, altho the prospect of personal emolument has
been some inducement to me, yet I feel infinitely more pleasure in
reflecting on the immense advantage my country will derive.
CHAPTER Vni
INTRODUCTION OF MANUFACTURES AND CONDITION
OF THE PEOPLE, 177 5-18 16
I. Manufactures
A. Little Manufacturing for Sale, 177$ ^
Writing just on the eve of the Revolution the author of American Husbandry
concluded that there was little manufacturing for the market carried on in the
colonies, but that home manufactures were generally pract^qed.^2^^<-Ci'/>t ^
Nothing is more difficult than to discover the amount of their
manufactures for sale:. . .
That the manufactures for sale are not so great as some have
imagined, may be conceived from the vast number of inhabitants,
who in all probability work entirely for themselves; in a country where
the minute division of landed property is so great as in the most popu-
lous of the northern colonies, and in a climate that will yield little
valuable, it is impossible that the people should be able to purchase
manufactures: poor countrymen in England do it because all their
income is paid them in money, whatever may be their work; but in
America day-labourers are rarely to be found, except in the neighbour-
hood of great towns; on the contrary, the man who in England
would be a labourer, would there be a little free-holder, who probably
raising for many years but little for sale, is forced to work up his wool
in his family, his leather, and his flax, after which, the rest of his
consumption is scarce worth mentioning. The number of people in
the northern colonies who come under this denomination is very
great. ...
B. Obstacles to Manufactures, 1776 ^
Some of the disadvantages under which manufactures labored in America, as
dtod by Dean Tucker, were real and others were imaginary, but the truth was that
agriculture, fishing, and commerce were more lucrative branches of enterprisck
Tucker wrote with a bias, yet with shrewdness.
> Amcrkan Husbandry. By an American (I^ndon, 1775), II, 259-60.
• A Serirs of Answers to Certain Popular Objections, against Separating from tl
Rebellious Colonies, and Discarding them entirely. By Josiah Tucker (Glocester,^
1776), 42-3.
INTRODUCTION OF MANUFACTURES 253
In regard to the Capability of America to rival Great-Britain in
the Cheapness and Goodness of Manufactures (which are the main
Points to be attended to) be it observed, that America naturally
labours under many capital Defects respecting Manufactures. For
in the first Place, it doth not abound with Wool, or Silk, Copper,
Iron, Lead, Tin, or Coals; Articles of the utmost Consequence in
establishing large and extensive Manufactures: — Secondly, the Cli-
mate of the greatest Part of the Country is unfavorable to several
Species of Manufactures, being either too cold, and too much frozen
up in Winter, or too melting and suffocating in Summer; and very
frequently the same Country or Province partakes of both Extremes.
Thirdly, the Genius and Disposition of the People are not turned
towards hard and constant Labour; a Circumstance this, which is vis-
ible through every Part of this great Continent. Fourthly, their small
Capitals, and Want of Credit is another very great Impediment; and
it is too apparent that this Difficulty is not likely to be removed by
their present Conduct. Fifthly, their Desertion of the Sea Coasts,
and removing in such Shoals up into the Country, beyond the Alli-
gahenny Mountains, as they now do, or lately did, is another great
Bar to the Encrease of any Manufactures, which could come in to
Competition with the English in any foreign Market.
C. Manufactures after the Revolution j 1^88 ^
During the Revolution, when foreign trade was cut off and the country was
thrown upon its own resources, manufactures sprang up on every side. These
were encouraged in some of the states by means of protective tariffs. Brissot,
who was enthusiastic about everything in the new republic, gives a glowing account
of their development which does not quite harmonize with the gloomy picture
presented the following year when protection was requested of the national
Congress.
EXPORTATIONS AND MANUFACTURES
If any thing can give an idea of the high degree of prosperity,
to which these confederated republics are making rapid strides, it is
the contemplation of these two subjects. It is impossible to enum-
erate all the articles to which they have turned their attention;
almost one half of which were unknown before the war. Among
the principal ones are ship-building, flour, rice, tobacco, manufactures
in woollen, linen, hemp and cotton ; the fisheries, oils, forges, and the
different articles in iron and steel; instruments of agriculture, nails,
^ New Travels in the United States of America, performed in 1788. By J. P.
Brissot de Warville (Dublin, 1792), 465-8.
254 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
leather, and the numerous objects in which they are employed;
paper, paste-board, parchment, printing, pot-ash, pearl-ash, hats of
all qualities, ship-timber, and the other wood of construction; cabinet-
work, cordage, cables, carriages; works in brass, copper and lead;
glass of different kinds; gun-powder, cheese, butter, callicoes, printed
linen, indigo, furrs, &c. Ship-building is one of the most profitable
branches of business in America. They built ships here before the
war, but they were not permitted to manufacture the articles necessary
to equip them ; every article is now made in the country. A fine ship,
called the Massachusetts ^ of eight hundred tons, belonging to Mr.
Shaw, had its sails and cordage wholly from the manufacture of
Boston; this single establishment gives already two thousand yards
of sail-cloth a week.
Breweries augment every where, and take place of the fatal dis-
tilleries. There are no less than fourteen good breweries in Philadel-
phia. The infant woollen manufactory at Hartford, from September,
1788, to September, 1789, gave about five thousand yards of cloth,
some of which sells at five dollars a yard; another at Watertown
in Massachusetts, promises equal success, and engages the farmers
to multiply their sheep.
Cotton succeeds equally well. The spinning machines of Ark-
wright are well known here, and are made in the country.
We have justly remarked in our work on the United States, that
nature invites the Americans to the labour of the forge, by the profuse
manner in which she has covered their soil with wood, and interspersed
it with metal and coals. Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and Delaware,
make annually three hundred and fifty tons of steel, and six hundred
tons of nails and nail rods. These articles are already exported from
America; as are machines for carding wool and cotton, particularly
common cards, which are cheaper than the English, and of a superior
quality. In these three states are sixty-three paper-mills, which
manufacture annually to the amount of 250,000 dollars. The state
of Connecticut last year made five thousand reams, which might be
worth nine thousand dollars.
The prodigious consumption of all kinds of glass multiplies the
establishment of glass works. The one on the Potowmack employs
five hundred persons. They have begun with success, at Philadclj^hia,
the printing of callicoes, cotton, and linen. Sugar refiners are in-
creasing every where. In Pennsylvania are twenty-one powder-mills,
which are supi)osed to produce annually 625 tons of gun powder.
INTRODUCTION OF MANUFACTURES 255
D. Manufactures before lySg ^
The report of Phineas Bond to the Enghsh government reassures it that there
is no danger that the Americans will manufacture for themselves, but that the
English could count confidently on the American market for the disposal of their
goods. While Bond's arguments were on the whole sound, it seems that he was
generally careful to report what the English would be pleased to read'.
In answer to the 6^^ point of your Grace's inquiries I have collected
as accurate an account as I possibly could of the State of manufac-
tures thro' out this continent and have endeavored to form some
judgement upon the subject which I take the liberty of submitting
to your Grace's consideration. (No. 22) — America must for a long
time my Lord be under the necessity of purchasing and importing
vast quantities of British or other European manufactures — the
preference has and will be given to British manufactures, they are for
the most part of the best quality and of course come cheapest to the
consumer in the end. The credit too which the merchants of England
allow to the American traders, is infinitely more liberal than any
other nation upon earth can afford; in so much that many articles
of foreign, European manufacture, calculated for the American mar-
ket, are brought hither circuitously thro' England and English credit
is resorted to as the immediate mode of payment for such foreign
articles.
In a country, my Lord, so extensive as this continent with a sea-
board frontery of 1500 miles in length and a Western limit hitherto
undefined at present inhabited by scarcely more than 3,000,000 of ^^\
people possessing a strong natural disposition to husbandry with a /
powerful propensity to migrate a series of centuries must elapse /
before this country will be peopled to such a degree as to make the ,
encouragement of manufacture an object of necessary recourse:
Agriculture will long continue the source from whence the mass of
people will draw their subsistence. . . . Manufactures which re-
quire art, labour, and expence to any great extent of either, may be
attempted but they will often fail for want of capitals and because
the extensive capitals in Europe can afford their manufactures at
a rate, vastly lower, than almost anything can be afforded for which
is undertaken here.
Where the raw material however can be taken from the earth
and converted into an article of immediate use or speedy demand
^ Report of Phineas Bond, British Consul in Philadelphia, to his Government,
November 10, lySg. In Annual Report of the American Historical Association
(Washington, 1897), I, 630-2.
2s6 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
with little expence and art and where from the bulk or weight of the
foreign manufacture, the expence which may attend the carriage is
great, the American manufacturers will have the advantage of the
European manufacturers, and in this line the Americans do and will
succeed.
Under the .description of articles of immediate use and speedy
demand may be comprehended nails and coarse manufactures of
iron, Tools which relate to husbandry, to architecture and which are
used by most Handycraftsmen. Under the description of articles
of heavy bulk or weight may be comprehended anvils, forge hammers,
anchors and cast irons of various kinds for mills, carriages and other
purposes.
E. A Petition for Protection, lySg ^
When the first Congress met under the new Constitution it was petitioned for
relief by numerous infant industries. The one cited is typical of many similar
ones. The first act passed by Congress was a tariff act, primarily for revenue
purjwses, but which granted some slight amount of protection.
Saturday, April ii [17893.
Mr. Smith, (of Maryland) presented a petition from the trades-
men, manufacturers, and others, of the town of Baltimore, which
was read, setting forth. That, since the close of the late war, and the
completion of the Revolution, they have observed with serious regret
the manufacturing and the trading interest of the country rapidly
declining, and the attempts of the State Legislatures to remedy the
evil failing of their object; that, in the present melancholy state of
our country, the number of poor increasing for want of employment,
foreign debts accumulating, houses and lands depreciating in value,
and trade and manufactures languishing and expiring, they look up
to the Supreme Legislature of the United States as the guardians
of the whole empire, and from their united wisdom and patriotism,
and ardent love of their country, expect to derive that aid and assist-
ance which alone can dissipate their just apprehensions, and animate.
them with hopes of success in future, by imposing on all foreign articles,'
which can be made in America, such duties as will give a just and
decided preference to their labors; discountenancing that trade
which tends so materially to injure them and impoverish their country;
measures which, in their consequences, may also contribute to the
discharge of the national debt and the due support of the Government;
that they have annexed a list of such articles as are or can be manu-
* Atmals of Congress (Washington, 1834), I, 115. |
INTRODUCTION OF MANUFACTURES 257
factured amongst them, and humbly trust in the wisdom of the Legis-
lature to grant them, in common with the other mechanics and manu-
facturers of the United States, that relief which may appear proper.
F. Report on Manufactures^ lygi ^
The House of Representatives in January, 1790, requested Hamilton, the
Secretary of the Treasury, to prepare a report on manufactures, but he did
not present it until nearly two years later, in December, 1791. The report is said
by Professor Taussig to be ''the strongest presentation of the case for protection
which has been made by any American statesman." Owing to the outbreak soon
after of the Napoleonic Wars, however, and the consequent greater profitableness
of agriculture and commerce, the report had little effect in promoting tariff legisla-
tion at the time. The parts cited in this extract are meant to illustrate the state
of manufactures rather than the arguments for protection.
The expediency of encouraging manufactures in the United
States, which was not long since deemed very questionable, appears
at this time to be pretty generally admitted. The embarrassments
which have obstructed the progress of our external trade have led to
serious reflections on the necessity of enlarging the sphere of our
domestic commerce. The restrictive regulations, which in foreign
markets abridge the vent of the increasing surplus of our agricultural
produce, serve to beget an earnest desire that a more extensive de-
mand for that surplus may be created at home; and the complete
success which has rewarded manufacturing enterprise, in some valu-
able branches, conspiring with the promising symptoms which attend
some less mature essays in others, justify a hope that the obstacles
to the growth of this species of industry are less formidable than they
were apprehended to be; and that it is not difficult to find, in its
further extension, a full indemnification for any external disad-
vantages which are or may be experienced, as well as an accession
of resources favorable to national independence and safety.
There still are, nevertheless, respectable patrons of opinions
unfriendly to the encouragement of manufactures. The following
are, substantially, the arguments by which these opinions are defended:
"In every country (say those who entertain them), agriculture
is the most beneficial and productive object of human industry.
This position, generally, if not universally true, applies with peculiar
emphasis to the United States, on account of their immense tracts
of fertile territory, uninhabited and unimproved. Nothing can
^ Report on Manufactures. By Alexander Hamilton. In American State
Papers, Series Finance (Washington, 1832), I, 123-144, passim.
258 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
afford so advantageous an employment for capital and labor, as the
conversion of this extensive wilderness into cultivated farms. Ncjthing
equally with this can contribute to the population, strength, and real
riches of the country.
"To endeavor, by the extraordinary patronage of government,
to accelerate the growth of manufactures, is in fact to endeavor,
by force and art, to transfer the natural current of industry from a
more to a less beneficial channel. . . .
"This policy is not only recommended to the United States by
considerations which affect all nations; it is, in a manner, dictated
to them by the imperious force of a very peculiar situation. 1 he
smallness of their population, compared with their territory; the
constant allurements to emigration from the settled to the unsettled
parts of the country; the facility with which the less independent
condition of an artisan can be exchanged for the more independent
condition of a farmer; these and similar causes conspire to produce,
and for a length of time must continue to occasion, a scarcity of hands
for manufacturing occupation, and dearness of labor generally.
To these disadvantages for the prosecution of manufactures, a de-
ficiency of pecuniary capital being added, the prospect of a successful
competition with the manufacturers of Europe must be regarded as
little less than desperate. Extensive manufactures can only be the
offspring of a redundant, at least of a full population. Till the latter
shall characterize the situation of this country, 'tis vain to hope
for the former. ..."
This mode of reasoning is founded upon facts and principles
which have certainly respectable pretensions. . . .
The objections to the pursuit of manufactures in the United
States, which next present themselves to discussion, represent an
impracticability of success arising from three causes: scarcity of
hands, dearness of labor, want of capital.
The two first circumstances are to a certain extent real, and within
due limits ought to be admitted as obstacles to the success of manu-
facturing enterprise in the United States. But there are various
considerations which lessen their force, and tend to afford an assur-
ance that they are not sufl[icient to prevent the advantageous prose-
cution of many very useful and extensive manufactories. ...
To all the arguments which are brought to evince the imprac-
ticability of success in manufacturing establishments in the United
States, it might have been a sufficient answer to have referred to the
experience of what has been already done. It is certain that several
INTRODUCTION OF MANUFACTURES 259
important branches have grown up and flourished with a rapidity
which surprises, affording an encouraging assurance of success in
future attempts. Of these it may not be improper to enumerate the
most considerable: —
1. Of Skins. — Tanned and tawed leather, dressed skins, shoes,
boots, and slippers, harness and saddlery of all kinds, portmanteaus
and trunks, leather breeches, gloves, muffs and tippets, parchment
and glue.
2. Of Iron. — Bar and sheet iron, steel, nail rods and nails, imple-
ments of husbandry, stoves, pots, and other household utensils, the
steel and iron work of carriages, and for shipbuilding, anchors,
scale-beams, and weights, and various tools of artificers, arms of
different kinds; though the manufacture of these last has of late
diminished for want of demand.
3. Of Wood. — Ships, cabinet wares and turnery, wool and
cotton cards, and other machinery for manufactures and husbandry,
mathematical instruments, coopers' wares of every kind.
4. Of Flax and Hemp. — Cables, sail-cloth, cordage, twine and
packthread.
5. Bricks, and coarse tiles and potters' wares.
6. Ardent spirits and malt liquors.
7. Writing and printing paper, sheathing and wrapping paper,
pasteboards, fullers' or press papers, paper hangings.
8. Hats of fur and wool, and mixtures of both, women's stuff
and silk shoes.
9. Refined sugars.
10. Oils of animals and seeds, soap, spermaceti and tallow
candles.
11. Copper and brass wares (particularly utensils for distillers,
sugar refiners and brewers), andirons and other articles for household
use, philosophical apparatus.
12. Tin wares for most purposes of ordinary use.
13. Carriages of all kinds.
14. Snuff, chewing and smoking tobacco.
15. Starch and hair powder.
16. Lampblack and other painters' colors.
17. Gunpowder.
Besides manufactories of these articles, which are carried on as
regular trades, and have attained to a considerable degree of maturity,
there is a vast scene of household manufacturing which contributes
more largely to the supply of the community than could be imagined
26o READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
without having made it an object of particular inquiry. This obser-
vation is the pleasing result of the investigation to which the subject
of this report hsts led, and is applicable as well to the southern as to
the middle and northern States. Great quantities of coarse cloths,
coatings, serges and flannels, linsey-woolseys, hosiery of wool, cotton
and thread, coarse fustians, jeans and muslins, checked and striped
cotton and linen goods, bedticks, coverlets and counterpanes, tow
linens, coarse shirtings, sheetings, toweling and table linen, and
various mixtures of wool and cotton, and of cotton and flax, are made
in the household way, and in many instances to an extent not only
sufficient for the supply of the families in which they are made, but
for sale, and even in some cases for exportation. It is computed in
a number of districts that two-thirds, three-fourths, and even four-
fifths of all the clothing of the inhabitants are made by themselves.
The importance of so great a progress as appears to have been made
in family manufactures within a few years, both in a moral and
political view, renders the fact highly interesting. . . .
A designation of the principal raw material of which each manu-
facture is composed will serve to introduce the remarks upon it; as,
in the first place,
IRON
The manufactures of this article are entitled to pre-eminent rank.
None are more essential in their kinds, nor so extensive in their uses.
They constitute, in whole, or in part, the implements or the materials,
or both, of almost every useful occupation. Their instrumentality
is everywhere conspicuous.
It is fortunate for the United States that they have peculiar
advantages for deriving the full benefit of this most valuable material
and they have every motive to improve it with systematic care. It
is to be found in various parts of the United States in great abundance,
and of almost every quality; and fuel, the chief instrument in manu-
facturing it, is both cheap and plenty. This particularly applies to
charcoal; but there are productive coal mines already in operation,
and strong indications that the material is to be found in abundance
in a variety of other places.
The inquiries to which the subject of this report has led have been
answered with proofs, that manufactories of iron, though generally
understood to be extensive, are far more so than is commonly supposed.
The kinds in which the greatest progress has been made have been
mentioned in another place, and need not be repeated; but there is
INTRODUCTION OF MANUFACTURES 261
little doubt that every other kind, with due cultivation, will rapidly
succeed. It is worthy of remark that several of the particular
trades of which it is the basis are capable of being carried on without
the aid of large capitals.
Iron works have greatly increased in the United States, and are
prosecuted with much more advantage than formerly. The average
price before the Revolution was about $64 per ton; at present it is
about $80, — a rise which is chiefly to be attributed to the increase of
manufactures of the material. . . .
Steel is a branch which has already made a considerable progress,
and it is ascertained that some new enterprises on a more extensive
scale have been lately set on foot. . . .
The United States already in a great measure supply themselves
with nails and spikes. They are able, and ought certainly to do it
entirely. The first and most laborious operation in this manufacture
is performed by water-mills; and of the persons afterwards employed,
a great proportion are boys, whose early habits of industry are of
importance to the community, to the present support of their families,
and to their own future comfort. It is not less curious than true that,
in certain parts of the country, the making of nails is an occasional
family manufacture. . . .
The implements of husbandry are made in several States in great
abundance. In many places it is done by the common blacksmiths.
And there is no doubt that an ample supply for the whole country
can with great ease be procured among ourselves.
Various kinds of edged tools, for the use of mechanics, are also
made; and a considerable quantity of hollow wares, — though the
business of castings has not yet attained the perfection which might
be wished. It is, however, improving, and as there are respectable
capitals in good hands embarked in the prosecution of those branches
of iron manufactories, which are yet in their infancy, they may all
be contemplated as objects not difficult to be acquired. . . .
Fire-arms, and other military weapons, may, it is conceived, be
placed without inconvenience in the class of articles rated at 15%.
There are already manufactories of these articles, which only
require the stimulus of a certain demand to render them adequate
to the supply of the United States. . . .
Manufactures of steel generally, or of which steel is the article
of chief value, may with advantage be placed in the class of goods
rated at 7!%. As manufactures of this kind have not yet made
any considerable progress, it is a reason for not rating them as high
262 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
as those of iron; but as this material is the basis of them, and as their
extension is not less practicable than important, it is desirable to
promote it by a somewhat higher duty than the present. . . .
COPPER
The manufactures of which this article is susceptible are also
of great extent and utility. Under this description, those of brass,
of which it is the principal ingredient, are intended to be included.
The material is a natural production of the country. Mines of
copper have actually been wrought, and with profit to the under-
takers, though it is not known that any are now in this condition.
And nothing is easier than the introduction of it from other countries
on moderate terms and in great plenty.
Coppersmiths and brassfounders, particularly the former, are
numerous in the United States, — some of whom carry on business
to a respectable extent. . . .
LEAD
There are numerous proofs that this material abounds in the
United States, and requires little to unfold it to an extent more than
equal to every domestic occasion. A prolific mine of it has long been
open in the southwestern parts of Virginia, and under a public ad-
ministration, during the late war, yielded a considerable supply for
military use. This is now in the hands of individuals, who not only
carry it on with spirit, but have established manufactories of it at
Richmond, in the same State. . . .
FOSSIL COAL
This, as an important instrument of manufactures, may without
impropriety be mentioned among the subjects of this report. . . .
It is known that there are several coal mines in Virginia, now
worked; and appearances of their existence are familiar in a number of
places. . . .
WOOD I
Several manufactures of this article flourish in the United States!
Ships are nowhere built in greater perfection, and cabinet warcj
generally are made little, if at all, inferior to those of Europe. Thcii
extent is such as to have admitted of considerable exportation. . .
SKINS
There are scarcely any manufactories of greater importance thai
of this article. Their direct and very happy influence upon agricul
INTRODUCTION OF MANUFACTURES 263
ture, by promoting the raising of cattle of different kinds, is a very
material recommendation.
It is pleasing, too, to observe the extensive progress they have
made in their principal branches, which are so far matured as almost
to defy foreign competition. Tanneries, in particular, are not only
carried on as a regular business in numerous instances, and in various
parts of the country, but they constitute, in some places, a valuable
item of incidental family manufactures. ...
GRAIN
Ardent spirits and malt liquors are, next to flour, the two principal
manufactures of grain. The first has made a very extensive, the
last a considerable progress in the United States. In respect to both,
an exclusive possession of the home market ought to be secured to
the domestic manufacturers, as fast as circumstances will admit.
Nothing is more practicable, and nothing more desirable. . . .
The consumption of Geneva, or gin, in this country, is extensive.
It is not long since distilleries of it have grown up among us to any
importance. They are now becoming of consequence, but being still
in their infancy, they require protection. . . .
FLAX AND HEMP
Manufactures of these articles have so much affinity to each other,
and they are so often blended, that they may with advantage be con-
sidered in conjunction. The importance of the linen branch to agri-
culture; its precious effects upon household industry; the ease with
which the materials can be produced at home to any requisite extent;
the great advances which have been already made in the coarser
fabrics of them, especially in the family way, — constitute claims of
peculiar force to the patronage of government. . . .
COTTON
There is something in the texture of this material which adapts
it in a peculiar degree to the application of machines. The signal
utility of the mill for spinning of cotton, not long since invented in
England, has been noticed in another place; but there are other ma-
chines scarcely inferior in utility, which, in the different manufactories
of this article, are employed either exclusively or with more than
ordinary effect. This very important circumstance recommends the
fabrics of cotton in a more particular manner to a country in which
I a defect of hands constitutes the greatest obstacle to success.
The variety and extent of the uses to which the manufactures of
264 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
this article are applicable is another powerful argument in their
favor.
And the faculty of the United States to produce the raw material
in abundance and of a quality which, though alleged to be inferior
to some that is produced in other quarters, is nevertheless capable
of being used with advantage in many fabrics, and is probably sus-
ceptible of being carried by a more experienced culture to much
greater perfection, suggests an additional and a very cogent induce-
ment to the vigorous pursuit of the cotton branch in its several
subdivisions. . . .
Manufactories of cotton goods not long since established at Beverly,
in Massachusetts, and at Providence, in the State of Rhode Island,
and conducted with a perseverance corresponding with the patriotic
motives which began them, seem to have overcome the first obstacles
to success, — producing corduroys, velverets, fustians, jeans, and
other similar articles, of a quality which will bear a comparison with
the like articles brought from Manchester. The one at Providence
has the merit of being the first in introducing into the United States
the celebrated cotton mill, which not only furnishes materials for that
manufactory itself, but for the supply of private families for house-
hold manufacture.
Other manufactories of the same material as regular businesses
have also been begun at different places in the State of Connecticut,
but all upon a smaller scale than those above mentioned. Some essays
are also making in the printing and staining of cotton goods. There i
are several small establishments of this kind already on foot.
WOOL
In a country the climate of which partakes of so considerable
proportion of winter as that of a great part of the United States, th<
woollen branch cannot be regarded as inferior to any which relate
to the clothing of the inhabitants.
Household manufactures of this material are carried on in differ-
ent parts of the United States to a very interesting extent, but then
is only one branch which as a regular business can be said to have
acquired maturity. This is the making of hats.
Hats of wool, and of wool mixed with fur, art made in large
quantities in different States, and nothing seems wanting but an ade
quate supply of materials to render the manufacture commensurate
with the demajid.
A promising essay towards the fabrication of cloths, cassimei
INTRODUCTION OF MANUFACTURES 265
and other woollen goods, is' likewise going on at Hartford, in Con-
necticut. Specimens of the different kinds which are made, in the
possession of the secretary, evince that these fabrics have attained
a very considerable degree of perfection. Their quality certainly
surpasses anything that could have been looked for in so short a
time and under so great disadvantages, and conspires with the scanti-
ness of the means which have been at the command of the directors
to form the eulogium of that public spirit, perseverance and judgment
which have been able to accomplish so much. . . .
SILK
The production of this article is attended with great facility in
most parts of the United States. Some pleasing essays are making
in Connecticut as well towards that as towards the manufacture of
what is produced. Stockings, handkerchiefs, ribbons and buttons
are made, though as yet but in small quantities.
A manufactory of lace, upon a scale not very extensive, has been
long memorable at Ipswich, in the State of Massachusetts. . . .
GLASS
The materials for making glass are found everywhere. In the
United States there is no deficiency of them. . . .
GUNPOWDER
No small progress has been of late made in the manufacture of
this very important article. It may, indeed, be considered as already
established, but its high importance renders its further extension
very desirable. . . .
PAPER
Manufactories of paper are among those which are arrived at
the greatest maturity in the United States, and are most adequate
to national supply. That of paper-hangings is a branch in which
respectable progress has been made. . . .
PRINTED BOOKS
The great number of presses disseminated throughout the Union
seem to afford an assurance that there is no need of being indebted
to foreign countries for the printing of the books which are used in
the United States. . . .
REFINED SUGARS AND CHOCOLATE
Are among the number of extensive and prosperous domestic
manufactures. . . .
266 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
There is reason to believe that the progress of particular manu-
factures has been much retarded by the want of skillful workmen.
And it often happens that the capitals employed are not equal to the
purposes of bringing from abroad workmen of a superior kind. Here,
in cases worthy of it, the auxiliary agency of Government would in
all probability be useful. There are also valuable workmen in every
branch who are prevented from emigrating solely by the want of
means. Occasional aids to such persons, properly administered,
might be a source of valuable acquisitions to the country.
The propriety of stimulating by rewards the invention and intro-
duction of useful improvements, is admitted without difficulty. . . .
G. Progress of Manufactures, lyg^ ^
The distance of the United States from Europe and the consequent cost of
carriage of foreign goods gave to domestic manufactures a species of protection
which Coxe estimates at not less than twenty-five per cent. When to this were
added the possession of cheap raw materials and the inventive genius of the Ameri-
can people, a good case could be made to prove the success of manufactures in the
United States. At this juncture, however, the European wars gave to our agri-
culture and commerce such an opportunity for profit that there was little induce-
ment to embark capital in a doubtful manufacturing enterprise. Coxe wrote and
worked earnestly on behalf of manufactures.
The value of the manufactures of the United States is certainly
greater than double the value of their exports in native commodities.
The value of the manufactures of the United States is much greater
than the gross value of all their imports, including the value of
goods exported again.
The manufactures of the United States consist generally of articles
of comfort, utility, and necessity. Articles of luxury, elegance, and
show, are not manufactured in America, excepting a few kinds.
The manufactures of the United States have increased very rapidly
since the commencement of the revolutionary war, and particularly
in the last five years.
Household manufactures are carried on within the families of
almost all the farmers and planters, and of a great proportion of the
inhabitants of the villages and towns. This practice is increasing
under the animating influences of private interest and pul)liC|
spirit. . . .
The people of the United States are ingenious in the invention.
> A View oj the United States of A merica. By Tench Coxe (Philadelphia, 1 794) 1
430, 440.
INTRODUCTION OF MANUFACTURES 267
and prompt, and accurate in the execution, of mechanism and work-
manship, for purposes in science, arts, manufactures, navigation, and
agriculture. Rittenhouse's planetarium, Franklin's electrical con-
ductor, Godfrey's quadrant improved by Hadley, Rumsey's and Fitch's
steam-engines, Leslie's rod pendulum and other horological inventions,
the construction of ships, the New-England whale-boat, the construc-
tion of flour mills, the wire-cutter and bender for card makers, Fol-
som's and Brigg's machinery for cutting nails out of rolled iron, the
Philadelphia dray with an inclined plane, Mason's engine for extin-
guishing fire, the Connecticut steeple clock, which is wound up by
the wind, the Franklin fireplace, the Rittenhouse stove, Anderson's
threshing machine, Rittenhouse's instrument for taking levels,
Donaldson's hippopotamos and balance lock, and Wynkoop's under-
lators, are a few of the numerous examples.
H. Decline of Manufactures ^ lyg^ ^
The decline of manufactures a few years after the publication of Hamilton's
report, for the reasons already cited, is evident from the tone of Winterbotham's
comment, which discusses the expediency of encouraging them.
We now come to the subject of manufactures, the expediency of
encouraging of which in the United States, was not long since deemed
very questionable, but the advantages of which, appear at this time
to be generally admitted. The embarrassments which have obstructed
the progress of their external trade with European nations, have led
them to serious reflections on the necessity of enlarging the sphere
of their domestic commerce; the restrictive regulations which in
foreign markets have abridged the vent of the increasing surplus of
their agricultural produce, have served to beget in them an earnest
desire, that a more extensive demand for that surplus may be created
at home: And the complete success which has rewarded manufac-
turing enterprise, in some valuable branches, conspiring with the
promising symptoms which attend some less mature essays in others,
justify a hope, that the obstacles to the growth of this species of
industry are less formidable than they were apprehended to be; and
that it is not difficult to find, in its further extension, a full indemni-
fication, for any external disadvantages, which are or may be experi-
enced, as well as an accession of resources, favourable to national
independence and safety.
^ An Historical, Geographical, Commercial, and Philosophical View of the American
United States. By W. Winterbotham (London, 1795), I, 293.
268 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
I. Domestic Manufactures in the Back Country^ 1807 ^
In those sections of the country which, by reason of their distance from a market,
were unable to share in the trade with Europe and receive English manufactures
in return for their agricultural staples, domestic manufactures persisted. In fact
there was very little change in the back districts of the country from colonial
conditions.
While agriculture is so much attended to, and the means of engag-
ing in it so easy, it is not surprising that few direct their attention
to manufactures. Some years ago a cotton manufactory was es-
tablished near Statesborough [South Carolina], which bid fair to
rise into consideration. It was, however, soon perceived that the
price of labour was too great to permit its goods to stand any compe-
tition with those of similar qualities imported from Great Britain:
consequently the proprietors were obliged to discontinue their opera-
tions. A numerous population and scarcity of lands must first be
experienced in a country before its inhabitants will resort to manu-
factures, while a more eligible mode of subsistence exists. In the
upper country, however, necessity has obliged the inhabitants to
provide for their respective wants from their o^vn resources, in conse-
quence of the difficulty and expense of conveying bulky articles
from the sea-coast to the interior. The traveller there soon becomes
accustomed to the humming music of the spinning-wheel and the
loom. Cottons and woollens of various descriptions are made in
sufficient quantities for domestic use; and if we except the articles
of salt and sugar, the people in the upper parts of the state may be
considered independent of foreign support; for carpenters, smiths,
masons, tanners, shoemakers, sadlers, hatters, millwrights, and other
tradesmen, are conveniently situated throughout the country; and
the materials necessary for their respective professions are met with
in abundance.
i
II. Condition of the People g
A. American Characteristics, 1816^ ^
The duuacterizations of American abilities and manners during this formative
period arc as varied as the experiences of the various writers. Krissot was charmed
with the simplicity of morals and lack of poverty; Michaux comments on the
» Travfls throuf>h Canada, and the United States of North America, in the Vear^
1H06, 1H07, fr 180H. \\y John Lambert (2d edition, l^ndon, 1814), II, 21 1-2.
• America and htr Resources. By John IJristed (Umdon, 1818), 431-7.
INTRODUCTION OF MANUFACTURES 269
prosperity of the people, while Weld complains of their lack of manners. Prob-
ably there was truth in each of these impressions. Bristed mingles praise and
blame in a fairly impartial manner.
There is no striking difference in the general deportment and
appearance of the great body of Americans in the towns, from Norfolk
in Virginia, to Madison in Indiana. The same well-looking, well-
dressed, tall, stout men, appear every where pretty much at their
ease, shrewd and intelligent, and not too industrious. When asked
why they do not employ themselves? they answer, "we live in free-
dom, we need not work like the English;" as if idleness itself were
not the worst species of slavery. In the country are to be found
several backwoodmen, who are savage and fierce, and view newcomers
as intruders. They, however, must quickly yield to the rapid growth
of civilization. The great body of the western settlers are, beyond
all comparison, superior to the European farmers and peasantry in
manners and habits, in physical capacity, and abundance, and above
all, in intelligence and political independence.
The activity and enterprise of the Americans far exceed those of
any other people. Travellers continually are setting out on journeys
of two or three thousand miles, by boats, on horses, or on foot, with-
out any apparent anxiety or deliberation. Nearly a thousand per-
sons every summer pass down the Ohio as traders or boatmen, and
return on foot; a distance by water of seventeen hundred, by land,
of a thousand miles. . . .
Learning, taste, and science, of course, have not yet made much
headway in the west; their reading is, in general, confined to news-
papers and political pamphlets, a little history, and less religion;
but their intellects are keen, vigorous, and active. . . .
The high wages of labour, the abimdance of every kind of manual
and mechanical employment, the plenty of provisions, the vast
quantity, and low price of land, all contribute to produce a healthy,
strong, and vigorous population. Four-fifths of our people are en-
gaged in agricultural pursuits, and the great majority of these are
proprietors of the soil which they cultivate. In the intervals of toil
their amusements consist chiefly of hunting and shooting, in the
woods, or on the mountains; whence they acquire prodigious muscular
activity and strength. . . .
Thus the people of the United States possess, in an eminent degree,
the physical elements of national greatness and strength. Add to
these, the general prevalence of elementary instruction, which enables
the great mass of the people to develope their natural faculties and
2^o READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
powers, and capacitates them for undertaking any employment,
success in which depends upon shrewdness, intelligence, and skill;
whence their singular ingenuity in mechanical and manual operations,
and their sound understanding, enterprise, and perseverance in the
practical concerns of life. And to crown all, the political sover-
eignty of the nation residing in the people, gives them a personal
confidence, self-possession, and elevation of character, unknown and
unattainable in any other country, and under any other form of
government; and which renders them quick to perceive, and prompt
to resent and punish any insult offered to individual or national
honour. Whence in the occupations of peace, and the achievements
of war, the Americans average a greater aggregate of effective force,
physical, intellectual, and moral, than ever has been exhibited by a
given number of any other people, ancient or modern. Individuals,
in other countries, may, and do exhibit as much bodily activity and
strength, as much intellectual acuteness and vigour, as much moral
force and elevation, as can be shown forth by any American indi-
viduals; but no country can display such a population, in mass, as
are now quickening the United States with their prolific energy, and
ripening fast into a substance of power, every movement of which will
soon be felt in its vibrations to the remotest corners of the earth. . . .
There are, however, drawbacks upon the high elements of national
greatness above enumerated, to be found in some of our political
and social institutions. For example, slavery demoralizes the southern,
and those of the western states, which have adopted this execrable
system. Lotteries pervade the middle, southern, and western states,
and spread a horribly increasing mass of idleness, fraud, theft, false-
hood, and profligacy throughout all the classes of our labouring
population. . . . Our favourite scheme of substituting a state prison
for the gallows is a most prolific mother of crime. During the severity
of the winter season, its lodgings and accommodations are better
than those of many of our paupers, who are thereby incited to crime
in order to mend their condition. And the pernicious custom of
pardoning the most atrocious criminals, after a short residence in
the state-prison, is continually augmenting our flying squadrons of
murderers, house-breakers, foot-pads, forgers, highway robbers, and
swindlers of all sorts. . . .
Our state insolvent laws, likewise (for we are too patriotic to pyer-
mit Congress to pass an uniform bankrupt law, that might compel
our merchants to pay their foreign creditors), acts as a perpetual
bounty for dishonesty and fraud. . . .
mXRODUCTION OF MANUFACTURES 271
The poor-law system, as an awful encouragement to pauperism
and profligacy, requires no further comment. With the exception
oi forgery, in the ingenuity and audacity of which our native Americans
far surpass all other people, and for which our state-prisons do not
afford even a palliative, much less a remedy, the foreigners and free
blacks are the most numerous and atrocious of our criminals. . . .
The prevailing vice throughout the Union, excepting New-England,
is immoderate drinking; encouraged doubtless by the relaxing heats of
the climate, in the southern, middle, and western states, by the high
wages of labour, and by the absence of all restriction, in the shape
of excise, or internal duty. Not only our labourers generally, but too
many of our farmers, merchants, and other classes of the community,
are prone to a pernicious indulgence in spirituous liquors. ,
B. Wages and Cost of Living, 1802 ^
As Michaux shows here, not merely were money or nominal wages high, but
real wages, or wages measured by the commodities which could be purchased with
them, were even higher. Under these circumstances the position of the laborer
was a fortunate one, and his standard of Hving was high.
y.
The articles manufactured at Lexinton are very passable, and the
speculators are ever said to make rapid fortunes, notwithstanding the
extreme scarcity of hands. This scarcity proceeds from the inhabi-
tants giving so decided a preference to agriculture, that there are very
few of them who put their children to any trade, wanting their serv-
ices in the field. The following comparison will more clearly prove
this scarcity of artificers in the western states: At Charleston in
Carolina, and at Savannah in Georgia, a cabinet-maker, carpenter,
mason, tinman, tailor, shoemaker, &c. earns two piastres [dollars]
a day, and cannot live for less than six per week; at New York and
Philadelphia he has but one piastre, and it costs him four per week.
At Marietta, Lexinton, and Nasheville, in Tenessea, these workmen
earn from one piastre to one and a half a day, and can subsist a week
with the produce of one day's labour. Another example may tend
to give an idea of the low price of provisions in the western states.
The boarding house, where I lived during my stay at Lexinton passes
for one of the best in the town, and we were profusely served at the
rate of two piastres per week. I am informed that living is equally
^ Travels to the Westward of the Allegany Mountains. By F. A. Michaux
(London, 1805), 124-5,
(272) READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
cheap in the states of New England, which comprise Connecticut,
Massachusetts, and New Hampshire; but the price of labour is not so
high, and therefore more proportionate to the price of provisions.
C. Unwholesome Dietary^ lygy ^
Travelers in the United States during this period are almost unanimous in their
descriptions of the bountiful yet heavy diet spread on the typical American table,
especially of the hot breads and salt meats, to the consumption of which they
attributed various ills, from whooping cough to premature loss of teeth. Volney
was a Frenchman who traveled in this country between 1 795 and 1 798.
I will venture to say that, if a prize were proposed for the scheme
of a regimen most calculated to injure the stomach, the teeth, and the
health in general, no better could be invented than that of the
Americans. In the morning at breakfast, they deluge their stomach
with a quart of hot water, impregnated with tea, or so slightly with
coffee, that it is mere coloured water: and they swallow, almost with-
out chewing, hot bread, half baked, toast soaked in butter, cheese of
the fattest kind, slices of salt or hung beef, ham, &c., all which are
nearly insoluble. At dinner they have boiled pastes under the name
of puddings, and the fattest are esteemed the most delicious : all their
sauces, even for roast beef, are melted butter: their turnips and
potatoes swim in hog's lard, butter, or fat: under the name of pie, or
pumpkin, their pastry is nothing but a greasy paste, never sufficiently
baked: to digest these viscous substances, they take tea almost
Instantly after dinner, making it so strong, that it is absolutely
bitter to the taste; in which state it affects the nerves so powerfully,^
that even the English find it brings on a more obstinate restlessn^
than coffee. Supper again introduces salt meats, or oysters: as
Chatelux says, the whole day passes in heaping indigestions on one
another: and to give tone to the poor relaxed and wearied stomach,
they drink Madeira, rum, French brandy, gin, or malt spirits, which
complete the ruin of the nervous system.
D. Intemperance^ 1802 *
The consumption of liquors was universal at the beginning of the nineteenth
century, and even their intemperate use was regarded with a degree of tolerance
that would strike us as strange today. Michaux was a very careful and trust-
worthy observer.
« View of the Climate and Soil of the United States of A merica. By C. F. Volney
(London, 1804), 323-5-
• Travels to the Westward of the Allegany Mountains. By F. A. Michaux (Lon-
don, 1805), 40.
I
INTRODUCTION OF MANUFACTURES
273
... A passion for spirituous liquors is one of the features that
characterise the country people belonging to the interior of the United
States. This passion is so strong, that they desert their homes every
now and then to get drunk in public houses; in fact, I do not con-
ceive that there are ten out of a hundred who have resolution enough
to desist from it a moment provided they had it by them, notwith-
standing their usual beverage in summer is nothing but water, or
sour milk. They care very little for cyder, which they find too weak.
Their dislike to this wholesome and pleasant beverage is the more
distressing as they might easily procure it at a very trifling expense,
for apple trees of every kind grow to wonderful perfection in this
country.
E. Education, 1816 ^
The grant of public lands in support of the common schools insured the develop-
ment of educational opportunities for the mass of the people. Even at this early-
period, when the public-school system was as yet undeveloped, a firm foundation
was being laid. Warden was at c/ne time consul for the United States at Paris.
The education of youth, which is so essential to the well-being of
society, and to the development of national wealth, has always been
a primary object of public attention, in the United States. Since
the year 1800, especially, great additions have been made to the
number of schools and academical institutions; to the funds for sup-
porting them, and to all the means for providing instruction, and
disseminating information. In 1809 the number of colleges had in-
creased to twenty-five, that of academies to seventy-four. Those
institutions are incorporated by the legislature of each state, and are
subject to its inspection, though placed respectively under the direc-
tion of boards of trustees. . . .
In the western states congress have reserved 640 acres of the
public land in each township for the support of schools, besides seven
entire townships of 23,040 acres each, two of which are situated in
the state of Ohio, and one in each of the states and territories of
Michigan, Indiana, Illinois, Mississippi, and Louisiana. In the state
of New York in 181 1, the fund for common schools, subject to the
disposal of the legislature, amounted to half a million of dollars,
giving an annual revenue of 36,000 dollars. . . . Throughout the
New England states the schools are supported by a public tax, and
are under the direction of a committee. In these seminaries the poor
^ A Statistical, Political, and Historical Account of the United States of North
America. By D. B, Warden (Edinburgh, 1819), III, 453-8, passim.
274
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
and the rich are educated together, and are taught reading, writing,
arithmetic, grammar, and geography. In other parts of the Union
also, schools are provided for the education of the poorer class. The
system of Lancaster has been lately adopted in different places.
Various societies have been lately established, for the advancement
of knowledge; particularly of those branches which are connected
with agriculture, arts, and manufactures. . . .
The newspaper press is the great organ of communication in Amer-
ica. In this description of literature, the United States are entitled
to take precedence of all other countries, at least so far as relates to
number. In the beginning of the year 1810 there were 364 newspapers
in the United States, 25 of which were printed daily, 16 thrice a- week,
33 twice, and 262 weekly.^ Before the American revolution there
were but nine newspapers in the United States.
F. Post-offices and Rates, iygi-1816 ^
The educational value of the post office was early recognized, and the postal
system was inaugurated in 1775, and greatly extended after 1789. The principle
of a flat rate for all letters irrespective of distance or weight was not introduced
until 1850.
By the Constitution, Congress have power to establish post-
offices and post-roads: and soon after the commencement of the
Government, laws were passed, to carry this power into effect.
The benefits arising from the post-office establishment, to indi-
viduals are immense, and in some years, the public have derived no
inconsiderable revenue from this source. . . .
From this will be seen the increase of the establishment at the
following periods —
Year
1791
1801
1811
1816
No. of post-
offices
89
1. 02 5
2,403
3,260
Net revenue
Dolls. Cts.
Extent in miles
of post-roads
9,637 29
65,291 84
88,148 SI
[56,579
1,90s
22,309
37,035
48,976
» There are 8 in German, 5 in French, and 2 in Spanish.
• SUUistical Annals . . . of the United Slaks. By Adam Seybert (Philudil-
pW», 1818), 372-3.
INTRODUCTION OF MANUFACTURES 275
Rates of Postage established in 1816,^ viz.:
For every letter composed of a single sheet of paper, conveyed not ex-
ceeding 30 miles 6 cents
Do. over 30 and not exceeding 80 miles 10 do.
Do. 80 do. 150 do 12I do.
Do. 150 do. 400 do 182 do.
Do. over 400 miles 25 do.
For every double letter, or letter composed of two pieces of paper,
double those rates; and for every triple letter, or one composed of three
pieces of paper, triple those rates; and for every packet composed of
four or more pieces of paper, or one or more other articles, and
weighing one ounce avoirdupois, quadruple those rates, and in that
proportion for all greater weights; provided that no packet of
letters conveyed by the water-mails, shall be charged with more than
quadruple postage, unless the same shall contain more than four
distinct letters.
Act 9th April, 1816.
\^^'
n*
CHAPTER IX
THE DEVELOPMENT OF MANUFACTURES, 1800-1860
I. General View of Manufactures, 1810-1860
A. GaUatin^s Report on Manufactures^ 1810 ^
In 1806 and 1807, both Great Britain and France had restricted American
commerce, the former by Orders in Council, the latter by the Berlin and Milan
Decrees. The United States had retaliated in 1807 with the Embargo Act,
which prohibited the vessels of this country trading with either Great Britain
or France. Naturally much of the capital prev^iously invested in shippingi
found its way into manufactures. Pursuant to a request of Congress, Albert
Gallatin, secretary of the treasury, reported in April, 1810, on the state of
manufactures in the United States. The more important parts of this report
are:
The following manufactures are carried on to an extent which
may be considered adequate to the consumption of the United States,
the foreign articles annually imported being less in value than those
of American manufacture belonging to the same general class, which
are annually exported, viz.:
Manufactures of wood, or of which Flaxseed oil.
wood is the principal material. Refined sugar.
Leather, and manufactures of leather. Coarse earthen ware. v
Soap, and tallow candles. Snuff, chocolate, hair powder, and
Spermaceti oil and candles. mustard.
The following branches are firmly established, supplying, in sev-
eral instances, the greater, and, in all, a considerable, part of the
consumption of the United States, viz.:
Iron, and the manufactures of iron. Gunpowder.
Manufactures of cotton, wool, and flax. Window glass.
Hats. Jewelry and clocks.
Paper, printing types, printed books. Several manufactures of lead.
playing cards. Straw bonnets and hats.
Spirituous and malt liquors. Wax candles.
Several manufactures of hemp. J
• GftUatin's Report on Manufactures, 1810. American State Papers (Washing-
ton, 1834), Series Finance, II, 435-7.
THE DEVELOPMENT OF MANUFACTURES 277
Progress has also been made in the following branches, viz.:
Paints and colors, several chemical preparations and medicinal
drugs, salt, manufactures of copper and brass, japanned and plated
ware, calico printing, queens and other earthen and glass wares, &c
LEATHER, AND MANUFACTURES OF LEATHER
Tanneries are established in every part of the United States,
some of them on a very large scale — the capital employed in a single
establishment amounting to one hundred thousand dollars. A few
hides are exported, and it is stated that one-third of those used in
the great tanneries of the Atlantic States are imported from Spanish
America. Some superior or particular kinds of English leather and
morocco are still imported; but about 350,000 pounds of American
leather are annually exported. The bark is abundant and cheap;
and it seems, . . . that hides cost, in America, 5 J cents, and in
England, seven cents a pound; that the bark used f-or tanning, costs,
in England, nearly as much as the hides, and in America not one-
tenth part of that sum. It is, at the same time, acknowledged,
that much American leather is brought to market, of an inferior
quality, and that better is generally made in the middle than in the
Northern or Southern States. The tanneries of the State of Dela-
ware employ, collectively, a capital of one hundred and twenty
thousand dollars, and ninety workmen, and make, annually, one
hundred thousand dollars' worth of leather. Those of Baltimore
amount to twenty-two, seventeen of which have, together, a capital
of 187,000 dollars, and tan, annually, 19,000 hides, and 25,000 calf
skins.
Morocco is also made in several places, partly from imported
goat skins, and principally from sheep skins. And it may be proper
here to add, that deer skins, which form an article of exportation, are
dressed and manufactured in the United States, to the amount
required for the consumption of the country.
The principal manufactures of leather are those of shoes and boots,
harness and saddles. Some inconsiderable quantities of the two last
articles are both imported and exported. The annual importation
of foreign boots and shoes, amounts to 3,250 pair boots and 59,000
pair of shoes, principally kid and morocco. The annual exportation
of the same articles, of American manufacture, to 8,500 pair of boots
and 127,000 pair of shoes. The shoe manufactures of New Jersey
are extensive. That of Lynn, in Massachusetts, makes 100,000 pair
of women's shoes annually.
278 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
The value of all the articles annually manufactured in the United
States, which are embraced under this head, (leather) may be esti-
mated at twenty millions of dollars. . . .
COTTON, WOOL, AND FLAX
I. Spinning Mills and Manufacturing Establishments.
Returns have been received of eighty-seven mills, which were
erected at the end of the year 1809; sixty- two of which (forty-
eight, water, and fourteen, horse, mills) were in operation, and worked,
at that time, thirty-one thousand spindles. The other twenty five
will all be in operation in the course of this year, and, together with
the former ones, (almost all of which are increasing their machinery)
will, by the estimate received, work more than eighty thousand
spindles at the commencement of the year 181 1.
The capital required to carry on the manufacture, on the best
terms, is estimated at the rate of one hundred dollars for each spindle;
including both the fixed capital applied to the purchase of the mill-
seats, and to the construction of the mills and machinery, and that
employed in wages, repairs, raw materials, goods on hand, and con-
tingencies. But it is believed that no more than at the rate of sixty
dollars for each spindle is generally actually employed. Forty-five
pounds of cotton, worth about 20 cents a pound, are, on an average,
annually used for each spindle; and these produce about thirty-six
pounds of yarn, of different qualities, worth, on an average, one dol-
lar and twelve and a half cents a pound. Eight hundred spindles
employ forty persons, viz.: five men and thirty-five women and
children. . . .
Some of the mills, above mentioned, are also employed in carding^
and spinning wool, though not to a considerable amount. But:
almost the whole of that material is spun and wove in private families;
and there are yet but few establishments for the manufacture of
woollen cloths. Some information has, however, been received,
respecting fourteen of these, . . . manufacturing, each, on an
average, ten thousand yards of cloth a year, worth from one to ten
dollars a yard. It is believed that there are others, from which no
information has been obtained; and it is known that several estab-
lishments, on a smaller scale, exist in Philadelphia, Baltimore, and
some other places. All those cloths, as well as those manufactured
in private families, are generally superior in quality, though some-
what inferior in appearance, to imported cloths of the same price.
The principal obstacle to the extension of the ?iiamif;u tiirr i^ the
THE DEVELOPMENT OF MANUFACTURES 279
want of wool, which is still deficient, both in quality and quantity.
But those defects are daily and rapidly lessened, by the introduction
of sheep of the merino and other superior breeds; by the great de-
mand for the article; and by the attention now every where paid by
farmers to the increase and improvement of their flocks.
Manufacturing establishments, for spinning and weaving flax,
are yet but few. In the State of New York, there is one, which em-
ploys a capital of 18,000 dollars, and twenty-six persons, and in which
about ninety thousand pounds of flax are annually spun and wove,
into canvass and other coarse linen. Information has been received
respecting two, in the vicinity of Philadelphia, one of which produces,
annually, 72,000 yards of canvass, made of flax and cotton; in the
other, the flax is both hackled and spun by machinery; thirty looms
are employed; and it is said that 500,000 yards of cotton bagging,
sail cloth, and coarse linen, may be made annually. . . .
II. Household Manufactures
But by far the greater part of the goods made of those materials,
(cotton, flax, and wool,) are manufactured in private families, mostly
for their own use, and partly for sale. They consist principally of
coarse cloth, flannel, cotton stuffs, and stripes of every description,
linen, and mixtures of wool with flax or cotton. The information
received from every State, and from more than sixty different places,
concurs in establishing the fact of an extraordinary increase, during
the two last years, and in rendering it probable that about two-
thirds of the clothing, including hosiery, and of the house and table
linen, worn and used by the inhabitant of the United States, who do
not reside in cities, is the product of family manufactures.
In the Eastern and Middle States, carding machines, worked by
water, are every where established, and they are rapidly extending
southwardly and westwardly. Jennies, other family spinning ma-
chines, and flying shuttles, are also introduced in many places; and
as many fulling mills are erected as are required for finishing all the
cloth which is woven in private families. ...
IRON, AND MANUFACTURES OF IRON
The information received respecting that important branch is
very imperfect. It is, however, well known, that iron ore abounds,
and that numerous furnaces and forges are erected, throughout the
United States. They supply a sufficient quantity of hollow ware,
and of castings, of every description; but about 4,500 tons of bar
28o READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
iron are annually imported from Russia, and probably, an equal
quantity from Sweden and England together. A vague estimate
states the amount of bar iron annually used in the United States, at
fifty thousand tons, which would leave about forty thousand for that
of American manufacture. Although a great proportion of the ore
found in Vermont, Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Virginia, be of a
sup>erior quality, and some of the iron manufactured there, equal to
any imported, it is to be regretted, that, from the demand, and from
want of proper attention in the manufacture, much inferior American
iron is brought to market. On that account, the want of the ordinary
supply of Russian iron has been felt in some of the slitting and rolling
mills. But, whilst a reduction of the duty on Russian iron is asked
from several quarters, it is generally stated that a high or prohibi-
tory duty on English bar, slit, rolled, and sheet iron, would be bene-
ficial; that which is usually imported on account of its cheapness,
being made with pit coal, and of a very inferior quality.
The annual importations of sheet, slit, and hoop iron, amount to
five hundred and sixty-five tons; and the quantity rolled and slit in
the United States, is estimated at seven thousand tons. In the
State of Massachusetts alone, are found thirteen rolling and slitting
mills, in which about 3,500 tons of bar iron, principally from Russia,
are annually rolled or slit. A portion is used for sheet iron and nail
rods for wrought nails; but two- thirds of the whole quantity of bar
iron flattened by machinery in the United States, is used in the
manufacture of cut nails, which has now extended throughout the
whole country, and, being altogether an American invention, sub-
stituting machinery to manual labor, deserves particular notice. . . .
[T]he annual product of that branch alone, may be estimated at twelve
hundred thousand dollars, and that, exclusively of the saving of fuel,
the expense of manufacturing cut nails, is not one-third part of that
of forging wrought nails. About two hundred and eighty tons are
already annually exported, but the United States continue to import,
annually, more than fifteen hundred tons of wrought nails and spikes.
An increase of duty on these, and a drawback on the exportation of
the cut nails is generally asked for.
A considerable quantity of blistered, and some refined steel, are
made in America; but the foreign importations exceed 11,000 cwt.
a year.
The manufactures of iron consist principally of agricultural
implements, and of all the usual work performed by common
blacksmiths. To these may be added anchors, shovels, and spades, I
THE DEVELOPMENT OF MANUFACTURES 281
axes, scythes, and other edge tools, saws, bits, and stirrups, and a
great variety of the coarser articles of ironmongery; but cutlery,
and all the finer species of hardware, and of steel work, are almost
altogether imported from Great Britain. Balls, shells, and cannon,
of small caliber, are cast in several places; and three foundries for
casting solid, those of the largest caliber, together with the proper
machinery for boring and finishing them, are established at Cecil
county, Maryland, near the city of Washington, and at Richmond,
in Virginia; each of the two last may cast 300 pieces of artillery a year,
and a great number of iron and brass cannon are made at that, near
the seat of Government. Those of Philadelphia and near the Hudson
river, are not now employed. It may be here added, that there are
several iron foundries for casting every species of work wanted for
machinery, and that steam engines are made at that of Philadelphia.
At the two public armories of Springfield and Harper's ferry,
19,000 muskets are annually made. About 20,000 more are made at
several factories, of which the most perfect is said to be that near
New Haven, and which, with the exception of that erected at Rich-
mond by the State of Virginia, are all private establishments. These
may, if wanted, be immediately enlarged, and do not include a number
of gunsmiths employed in making rifles, and several other species
of arms. Swords and pistols are also manufactured in several places.
Although it is not practicable to make a correct statement of the
value of all the iron and manufactures of iron, annually made in the
United States, it is believed to be from twelve to fifteen millions of
dollars. The annual importations from all foreign countries, includ-
ing bar iron, and every description of manufactures of iron or steel,
are estimated at near four millions of dollars. . . .
From that imperfect sketch of American manufactures, it may,
with certainty, be inferred that their annual produce exceeds one
hundred and twenty millions of dollars. And it is not improbable
that the raw materials used, and the provisions and other articles
consumed, by the manufacturers, create a home market for agri-
cultural products not very inferior to that which arises from foreign
demand. A result more favorable than might have been expected
from a view of the natural causes which impede the introduction,
and retard the progress of manufactures in the United States.
The most prominent of those causes are the abundance of land
compared with the population, the high price of labor, and the want
of a sufficient capital. The superior attractions of agricultural pur-
suits, the great extension of American commerce during the late
282 RK\DINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
European wars, and the continuance of habits after the causes which
produced them have ceased to exist, may also be enumerated. Sev-
eral of those obstacles have, however, been removed or lessened.
The cheapness of provisions had always, to a certain extent, counter-
balanced the high price of manual labor; and this is now, in many
imp>ortant branches, nearly superseded by the introduction of ma-
chiner>'; a great American capital has been acquired during the last
twenty years; and the injurious violations of the neutral commerce
of the United States, by forcing industry and capital into other chan-
nels, have broken inveterate habits, and given a general impulse, to
which must be ascribed the great increase of manufactures during
the two last years.
B. Leading Manufactures in 1840 ^
In 1840 the leading manufactures were of cottons, woolens and machiner>'.
The table on the opffcsite page shows the extent of the manufactures of these
commodities for the various states.
C. View of Manufactures in i860 *
By i860 the manufactures of the United States employed over 1,250,000
persons, and turned out products to the value of approximately two billion dollars.
According to the census of that year the condition of the leading manufacturing
industries was as follows:
PRODUCTS OF INDUSTRY
The returns of Manufactures exhibit a most gratifying in-
crease, and present at the same time an imposing view of the magni-
tude to which this branch of the national industry has attained
within the last decennium.
The total value of domestic manufactures, (including fisheries
and the products of the mines,) according to the Census of i>50,
was $1,019,106,616. The product of the same branches for the year
ending June i, i860, as already ascertained in part and carefully
estimated for the remainder, will reach an aggregate value of nine-
teen hundred miliums of dollars (1,900,000,000). This result exhiVit>
an increase of more than eighty-six (86) per centum in ten years/ lit
growth of this branch of American labor appears, therefore, to h m
been in much greater ratio than that of the population. Its incrc^.-c
has been 1 23 p>er cent, greater than that even of the white population
* Adapted from the Sixth Census, 1840.
• Frdiminary Report an the Eighth Census, i860. (Washington, 1862), 59-f ;
THE DEX^ELOPMEXT OF MANUFACTURES
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284 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
by which it was principally produced. Assuming the total value of
manufactures in i860 to have been as already" stated, the product
per capita was in the proportion of sixty dollars and sixty-one hun-
dredths ($60 61) for every man, woman, and child in the Union. If
to this amount were added the very large aggregate of mechanical
productions below the annual value of five hundred dollars — of
which no official cognizance is taken — the result would be one of
startling magnitude.
The production of the immense aggregate above stated gave
employment to about 1,100,000 men and 285,000 women, or one
million and three hundred and eighty-five thousand persons. Each
of these, on an average, maintained two and a half other individuals,
making the whole number of persons supported by manufactures four
millions eight hundred and forty-seven thousand and five hundred,
(4,847,500,) or nearly one-sixth of the whole population. This was
exclusive of the number engaged in the production of many of the raw
materials, and of food for the 'manufacturers; in the distribution
of their products, such as merchants, clerks, draymen, mariners, the
employes of railroads, expresses, and steamboats; of capitalists,
various artistic and professional classes, as well as carpenters, brick-
layers, painters, and the members of other mechanical trades not
classed as manufacturers. It is safe to assume, then, that one-third
of the whole population is supported, directly and indirectly, by
manufacturing industry. . . .
It is a gratifying fact, shown by the official statistics, that whQc
our older communities have greatly extended their manufactures, the
younger and more purely agricultural States, and even the newest
Territories, have also made rapid progress. Nor has this depart-
ment of American industry been cultivated at the expense of any
other. There is much reason to believe that it affords the safest
guarantee of the permanency and success of every other branc
Evidence bearing upon this point is found in the manufacture
agricultural machines and implements, which is one of the branch(
that shows the largest increase in the period under review. Thei
is little doubt that the province of manufactures and invention in
case has been rather to create than to follow the demand. Tl
promptness of Americans to adopt labor-saving appliances, and the
vast areas devoted to grain and other staples in the United States,]
have developed the mechanics of agriculture to an extent and perfec-
tion elsewhere unequalled. The adoption of machinery to
extent now common in farm and plantation labor furnishes the best
THE DEVELOPMENT OF MANUFACTURES 285
assurance that the development of agriculture or manufactures to
their utmost, can never again justify the old charge of antagonism
between them in regard to labor, or injuriously affect either by materi-
ally modifying its cost or supply.
11. Progress of Cotton Manufactures, i 806-1 860
A. Cotton Manufactures in Massachusetts, 1806 ^
Already by 18 16 the cotton manufactures of the country were important. In
that year Congress imposed a tariff on imported cotton goods, which had the
effect of stimulating the industry and finally of making it the leading manufacture
in the country. This remarkable growth may be seen by comparing its value of
output and capital employed at different times. A traveler made the following
comment on the industry early in the century:
About four miles from Providence, we passed Patucket river,
and entered into the state of Massachusetts. Here there are very
handsome falls, and a little town called Patucket, in which there
is a thriving manufactory of cotton yarn and goods. The spinning
works are said to be on the most approved principle, and there are
several looms going by machinery.
We were informed that the cotton trade had been introduced
here by a gentleman from England, a pupil of Arkwright, who had
been very successful; that other people were following his example,
and that this branch was likely to increase to a great extent in this
district. I doubted the power of the people here to become com-
petitors with the manufacturers of England; but I learned that they
confine themselves pretty much to coarse goods, and articles of the
first necessity; and on turning the whole information, relative to
the subject, in my mind, I found that they had such a number of
circumstances in their favour, as were sufficient to balance, if not to
overcome, the disadvantages. The principal disadvantage is the
high wages which must be paid to the workmen; and it is supposed
that the people have a predeliction for agriculture, which has a ten-
dency to prevent them from settling at sedentary employments.
This last circumstance is the popular opinion in Britain, and I was
impressed with its reality myself; but after looking round me in this
country, I rather think that it is more specious than solid; for I
find there is no want of masons, carpenters, smiths, tanners, shoe-
makers, hatters, taylors, and other mechanics, none of which are
agricultural employments. All these and other branches are organ-
^ Travels Through the United States of America. By John Melish (Philadelphia
and London, 18 18), 73-5.
286 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
ized and practised with persevering industry, because the profits
resulting from them are equal to those resulting from agriculture;
and other branches will be subject to the same rule. In every com-
munity there are a great number of the members who are better
adapted for labour in the house than in the field; and the force of
this remark is peculiarly applicable to the cotton trade, in which a
large portion of the labour is performed by machinery, and the
remainder principally by women and children. But all labour is
better paid for in America than in Britain. The proportion is prob-
ably two to one; and if the cotton trade will afford this advance to
the labourers, it will bear a competition with similar manufacturers
of Britain, and prosper — not else.
The most striking circumstance in favour of the cotton manu-
factures is the cheapness of the raw material, which is the produce
of the United States. They manufacture here principally upland
cotton, and the price, including carriage to this place, is about 20
cents per pound; being about 12 cents lower than they can possibly
have it in Britain. The next circumstance is the heavy charges to
which British manufactured goods are subject before they come
into the American market. These may be reckoned at least equal to
45 per cent.: namely, carriage, insurance, and shipping charges,
5 per cent; American duties, i6j per cent.; importer's profit, 10
per cent; American merchant's profit and contingencies, 14I per
cent. . . .
It is my opinion, upon the whole, that the cotton manufacture
will increase in America; and that it holds out a very good induce-
ment for men of capital to embark in it.
B. State of Cotton Manufactures in 181 6 ^
In 1816 a house committee investigated the manufacture of cotton goods and
showed the development of the industry as follows:
While commerce flourished, the trade which had been carried on
with the continent of Europe, with the East Indies, and with the
colonies of Spain and France, enriched our enterprising merchants,
the benefits of which were sensibly felt by the agriculturists, whose
wealth and industry were increased and extended. When external
commerce was suspended, the capitalists throughout the Union be-
came solicitous to give activity to their capital. A portion of it,
it is Ixjlieved, was directed to the improvement of agriculture, and
* House CommiUee Report on Domestic Manufactures. Annals of Congress,
Tfi,r_.A (Washington, 1854), 961. ...
1
THE DEVELOPMENT OF MANUFACTURES 287
not an inconsiderable portion of it, as it appears, was likewise employed
in erecting establishments for manufacturing cotton wool. To make
this statement as satisfactory as possible — to give it all the cer-
tainty that it is susceptible of attaining, the following facts are re-
spectfully submitted to the consideration of the House. They show
the rapid progress which has been made in a few years, and evidently
the ability to carry them on with certainty of success, should a just
and liberal policy regard them as objects deserving encouragement:
In the year 1800, 500 bales of cotton were manufactured in manu-
facturing establishments.
In the year 1805, 1000 bales of cotton were manufactured in manu-
facturing establishments.
In the year 18 10, 10,000 bales of cotton were manufactured in manu-
facturing establishments.
In the year 181 5, 90,000 bales of cotton were manufactured in manu-
facturing establishments.
This statement the Committee have no reason to doubt; nor
have they any question as to the truth of the following succinct
statement of the capital which is employed, of the labor which it
commands, and of the products of that labor :
Capital $40,000,000
Males employed, from the age of 17 and upwards 10,000
Women and female children 66,000
Boys under 1 7 years of age 24,000
Wages of one hundred thousand persons, averaging $150 each $15,000,000
Cotton wool manufactured, ninety thousand bales, amounting to £27,000,000
Number of yards of cotton, of various kinds 81,000,000
Cost, per yard, averaging 30 cents $24,000,000
C. Historical Sketch of Cotton Manufactures before i8ji ^
The state of the cotton manufacturing industry in this country in 1831 was not
only promising but flourishing. More than a million spindles were in operation,
and each year several hundred million yards of cloth were turned out from more
than 500 mills. The development of the industry up to this point is given by Mr.
Kettell as follows:
The old mill of Samuel Slater, Esq., the first building erected in
America for the manufacture of cotton yarns, is a venerable wood-
built structure, two stories in height, bearing numerous evidences
of its antiquity, having been erected in 1793. Two spinning frames,
the first in the mill, are still there, and are decided curiosities in their
way. It is almost incredible to believe that this old building, time-
^ Eighty Years' Progress. By Thomas P. Kettell (Hartford, 1869), 280-4.
^
288. ...■'■ READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
fi^
wom
and weathe^-br^^^Apd, was the first to spread its sheltering
rcxrfiox c^jjte young pupil* of Arkwright, and that those dwarf frames,
ru^' and mildewed with inactivity, are the pioneer machines of that
immense branch of our national industry — the manufacture of
cotton goods. It may be remarked that down to 1828 the exporta-
tion of machines of all kinds, and also wool, was strictly prohibited
in England, for fear other nations should benefit by English mechani-
cal genius, of which they supposed they had a monopoly; when,
however, they found that the balance of genius was on this side of the
pond, they liberally removed the prohibition. Mr. Slater, the father
of American cotton manufacture, was so closely watched at the
English custom-house, that he could not smuggle over a drawing or
pattern. He had, however, acquired a full knowledge of the Ark-
wright principle of spinning, and from recollection, and with his
own hands, made three cards and twTnty-two spindles, and put them
in motion in the building of a clothier, by the water-wheel of an old
fulling-mill. Sixty-seven years have since elapsed, and the business
has in that period increased beyond all precedent in the history of
manufactures. . . .
By the returns of the marshals of the census of 18 10, the number
of cotton factories was 168, with 90,000 spindles; but from most of
the states no returns were made of the quantity of cotton used and
the yarns spun. Massachusetts had 54, most of them, no doubt,
small, having in the whole only 19,448 spindles, consuming but
838,348 pounds of cotton, and their produce valued at $931,916.
Rhode Island had 26 factories, with 21,030 spindles, and Connecticut
14, with 11,883 spindles. These were for the supply of yarn to b€
used in hand looms exclusively.
In this position of affairs the war took place; but just on its ev«
Mr. Francis C. Lowell, of Boston, returned from Europe, where hi
had inspected the great improvements in machines for cotton mani
facturing, and had formed the project of establishing the manufacti
in this country. He associated with himself in the enterprise
brother-in-law, Patrick S. Jackson, and they set about it. Tl
country was then at war with England, and there was no possibili<
of getting either models or machines thence, nor even drawing
The memory of Mr. Lowell was all that was to be depended u\
for the structure of the machinery, the materials used in the coi
struction, even the tools of the machine shop. The first object to
accomplished was to procure a power loom. To obtain one fi
England was, of course, impracticable; and although there wc
THE DEVELOPMENT OF MANUFACTURES 289
many patents for such machines in our Patent Office, not one had
yet exhibited sufficient merit to be adopted into use. Under these
circumstances but one resource remained — to invent one themselves
— and this these earnest men at once set about.
The establishment of the Lowell mills took place at a time when
the occurrence of war had diverted the capital of New England from
commerce, and it eagerly sought new models of investment. These
were presented in the promising prospects of the newly invented
machine manufactures. The cotton growth of the south had become
large before the war, and that event caused an immense accumulation
of stock that sunk the price to the lowest point, and by so doing,
offered an abundance of raw material at rates merely nominal com-
pared with what the English manufacturers had been paying. This
gave a great advantage to the new enterprise, and Congress aided it
by the establishment of protective duties. The minimum cotton duty
was invented for the purpose. The rate was nominally ad valorem,
but the price was fixed at a minimum, on which the duty was cast —
hence the duty was in effect specific. Thus, the abundant raw
material, the low price of cotton, and the protection of the government,
all combined to give breadth to the newly awakened manufacturing
fever. The capital that crowded into it, soon, as a matter of course,
overdid the business, and distress followed, which was sought to be
relieved by a still higher tariff in 1824. That seemed, however, to
add but fuel to the flame; and in 1828, still higher rates were de-
manded. We may compare these tariffs: cotton goods not dyed
were to be valued at twenty-five cents per square yard, and pay
twenty-five per cent, duty, or six and a quarter cents per yard; goods
printed or dyed were to pay nine cents per square yard; fustians,
moleskins, etc., were to pay twenty-five cents per square yard; wool-
lens were charged twenty-five per cent, in 1816, thirty-three and a half
per cent, in 1824, and forty-five per cent, in 1828. Under all these cir-
cumstances, the manufacture could not fail to grow rapidly, and of
course to bring on distress as the result. In 1831, the tariff excite-
ment had reached such a pitch that the most disastrous political
results were anticipated. It was then that the committee of the
convention collected information of the existing manufactures. They
reported the table which we annex. The returns are for the eleven
states where manufactures were well developed [modified statistics
of seven of the eleven states are given below]; some twenty to
thirty other mills were also reported, but so imperfectly that the
returns were rejected. The table is very valuable — as follows:—
290
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
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THE DEVELOPMENT OF MANUFACTURES 291
Such had been the immense growth of the manufacture in ten
years from the time the Lowell mills were started, when but little
machine cloth was made; but in 1831, there was made, it appears,
j 230,461,990 yards, or nearly twenty yards per head of all the people.
' It is obvious that this large and sudden production of cloth could have
found vent only by supplanting the work of families and hand looms,
and of course by pressing hard upon the spinners of yarn. . . .
D. A View of Cotton Manufactures in i860 ^
The twenty years preceding i860 saw a rapid development of the cotton goods
industry. The number of spindles increased to more than 5,000,000, while the
number of pounds of cotton consumed exceeded 350,000,000.
Among the great branches of pure manufacture in the United
States, that of cotton goods holds the first rank in respect to the value
of the product and the amount of capital employed. Aided by the
possession of the raw material as a product of our own soil, and by
the enterprise and ingenuity of our people, this valuable industry
has grown with a rapidity almost unrivalled.
The total value of cotton goods manufactured in New England
was $80,301,535, and in the middle States $26,272,111 — an increase
of 83.4 per cent, in the former, and 77.7 in the latter. The remaining
States produced to the value of $8,564,280, making the whole produc-
tion during that year $115,137,926, against $65,501,687, the value of
this branch in 1850, or an increase in the general business of nearly
76 per centum in ten years. In the States of Maine and New Jersey
the manufacture increased in the same time 152 per cent.; in Penn-
sylvania, over 102 per cent.; in New Hampshire and Connecticut,
over 87 per cent.; in Massachusetts nearly 69 per cent., and in Rhode
Island 88.7 per cent. The total production in this branch was at the
rate per capita of $3 69 for every individual in the Union, equivalent
to 46I yards of cloth for each, at the medium price of 8 cents per yard.
The average product per head in 1850 was 32 J yards. The increase
alone has, therefore, been at the rate of 11 yards for each person, or
nearly equal to the average annual consumption per capita in 1830,
when it was estimated to amount to twelve yards. The number of
hands employed in the manufacture in i860 was 45,315 males, and
73,605 females, an increase in the male operatives of 10,020, and in
the female of 10,944 since 1850. The average product of the labor
of each operative was $969. The number of spindles was returned
^ Preliminary Report on the Eighth Census, i860. (Washington, 1862), 65-7.
292
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
at 5,035,798, being an increase of 1,402,105, or 38.5 per cent, over the
aggregate in 1850, which was estimated at 3,633,693. The New
England States possess 3,959,297, or 78.6 per cent, of the whole, while
Massachusetts alone employs 1,739,700, or 29.3 per cent, of the num-
ber returned in the Union. The increase of spindles in the last decade
was, in New England, 1,208,219, or 30 per cent. In the State of
Maine, 186,100, or 163.3 per cent.; in the State of New Hampshire,
229,484, or 52.1 per cent.; in the State of Massachusetts, 451,609, or
35 per cent.; in the State of Rhode Island, 141,862, or 22.7 per cent;
in the State of Connecticut, 211,188, or 83.1 per cent.; while in Ver-
mont it exhibited a decrease.
The product per spindle varies in the different States, partly
accounted for by the fact that many manufacturers purchase yarns
which have been spun in other States.
The product of cotton goods per spindle is as follows: In
Maine, $22 12; Massachusetts, $21 12; New Hampshire, $24 87;
Vermont, $18 13; Rhode Island, $16; Connecticut, $16 46. The
average in the New England States is $20 30; in the middle States,
$30 48, and in the whole Union, $22 86.
The quantity of cotton used in the fabrication of the above good?
was 364,036,123 pounds, or 910,090 bales of 400 pounds each. Of this
amount the New England States consumed 611,738 bales, and Massai
chusetts alone 316,665. The consumption per spindle in that yea
in the various States and sections was as follows:
No. of Spindles
Pounds of Cotton
Pounds per
spindle
Maine
300,000
669,885
19,712
1,739,700
766,000
464,000
3,959,297
861,661
5,035,798
23,438,723
39,212,644
1,057,250
126,666,089
38,521,608
15,799,140
237,844,854
76,055,666
364,036,123
78
58.5
53
72.8
50.2
34
61.8
88.26
72.2
New Hampshire
Vermont. . .
Massachusetts
Rhode Island
Connecticut
In New England
In the Middle States. . .
In the United States. . .
When we consider the large number of hands, and especially*
women and children, who find em|)loyment in this business,
quantity of raw material, of machinery and of fuel, exclusively
THE DEVELOPMENT OF MANUFACTURES 293
American production, employed in this branch, and the amount of
comfortable clothing and household stuffs supplied at cheap rates,
or the amount it contributes to the internal and foreign commerce
of the Union — its progressive increase is a subject of the highest
satisfaction, and its growth both here and abroad is one of the
marvels of the nineteenth century.
III. The Woolen Industry, 1811-1860
A. Woolen Cloth for Army Uniforms, 181 1 ^
The woo^n industry had been important from an early day, for the " homespun "
worn by the" colonists was made of wool. Although its manufacture fell behind
that of cotton goods with the introduction of machinery, it continued to be in-
creasingly important down to the breaking out of the Civil War. Even before the
Second War with Great Britain the American manufactures were able to compete
with the English product.
In the woollen branch offers [of cloth for army uniforms] were
abundant, and the finer the goods or the materials proposed the more
ready the disposition, abundant the quantity in proportion to the
demand and moderate the prices. The best cloths, suitable for the
commissioned officers, were offered upon terms the least advanced
above the European prices, owing to the spreading of the merino
sheep. The cloths for the non-commissioned officers and privates,
were offered upon terms advanced upon the next degree of moderation
above the European prices, because the great body of our native or
old stock of sheep produce wool, which after picking out a little coarse
and a good deal of fine, will do well for cloths suitable for these two
purposes. . . .
B. Early Agitation for Sheep Raising, 181 1 ^
Friends of American woolen manufactures early called attention to the impor-
tance of increasing the flocks and of improving the breed of sheep in the United
States. To this end they pointed out the superior advantages of the country in
this respect over Great Britain. The following is a typical appeal:
It will be found in Mr. Arthur Young's "Report (p. 367) on
Lincolnshire^' in England, that the whole land in that county is
1,848,000 acres; having on them 2,400,000 sheep of two heavy fleeced
breeds, producing 21,610,000 pounds of wool, selling at one-sixth of a
dollar (or 15 pence sterling) per pound. The whole value of un-
^ Niks' Register (Baltimore, 181 1), I, 45.
^ Niles' Register (Baltimore, 181 1), I, 100.
294 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
manufactured wool is £810,000 sterling; equal to 3,600,000 dollars.—
This, at our prices for wool, would be equal in value to all the American
cotton exported from the United States in a year, being 7 or 8 mil-
lions of dollars. The weight of this wool is greater than the weight
of all the sheep wool yet made in the United States in any year.
When it is considered, that the quantity of land in Lincolnshire
(G. B.) is not more than one-fifteenth of the land in Pennsylvania,
or in New York, a tenth of South Carolina, or one-twelfth of North
Carolina, there can be no doubt of the immense capacity of the United
States to produce wool. The county of Lincoln (G. B.) is in a great
part fenny or marshy: in part it is heath: in parts dry and rich.
Some of the fenny districts produce fleeces of fourteen pounds. It is
probable that, some of our richest drained swamps would be excellent
for such sheep.
Mr. Young states, that the average of the Lincolnshire sheep, of
the two diferent breeds, is nine pounds of w^ool to the fleece: and those
farmers who confine themselves to the Lincolnshire breed get ten
pound. Some authorities say eleven pounds, are the true average
weight of the fleeces of the true Lincolnshire breed. Let us increase
our care of sheep, and omit to kill any lambs or sheep under three I
years old, and we shall have more wool in the next year or two foi
our army, navy, militia, and camp followers and all attendants anc
privateers, than will be requisite for any war with any power ir
Europe.
C. State of the Woolen Industry in 1816 ^
In 1 8 16 the house committee on commerce and manufactures expressed the belli
that a memorial from which the following extract is taken was substantially correct
At this time there are in the State of Connecticut alone twent
five establishments for the manufacture of woollen cloths, employii
twelve hundred persons, and as many more indirectly who do n
immediately appertain to the establishment. The capital alreac
invested therein amounts to four hundred and fifty thousand dollai
and they are capable of making, and probably do manufactu
annually, equal in amount to three hundred and seventy-five thousai
yards of narrow, or one hundred and twenty-five thousand yards
broadcloths. Besides this quantity made at the establishments, it
calculated there are five hundred thousand yards made annually
families and dressed in the country clothiers' shops; part of whii
* House CommilUe Report on Domestic Mattufacturcs. Annals of Congre
1815-16 (Washington, 1854), 1701-3.
THE DEVELOPMENT OF MANUFACTURES 295
is regularly sold to the country stores; . . . The value of all the
woollen cloths thus manufactured, at the lowest estimate, is about
$1,500,000, making a home market for a staple of nine hundred
thousand pounds of wool, or the produce of four hundred thousand
sheep. ...
A great proportion of the woollen manufacture is done by the
assistance of labor-saving machinery, which is almost exclusively
superintended by women and children, and the infirm, who would
otherwise be wholly destitute of employment; whereas they are now
able to maintain themselves. The manual labor employed is of that
class who, from their previous habits and occupations in life, are
wholly unfitted for agricultural pursuits; and who, if not thus employed
would, in most instances, be a burden on society. . . .
SUMMARY
Permanent capital in buildings and machinery $12,000,000.
Annual value of raw material, manufactured 7,000,000.
Value of cloths annually manufactured 19,000,000.
Increase of value by manufacturing 12,000,000.
Number of persons employed
Directly 50,000
Incidentally 50,000
100,000
D. The Woolen Industry in i860 ^
In i860 the woolen establishments in the United States numbered almost two
thousand, represented an investment of more than $35,000,000, and gave employ-
ment to 50,000 hands.
The returns of Woolen Manufacturers show an increase of over
fifty-one per cent, in ten years. The value of woollen and mixed
goods made in 1850 was $45,281,764. In i860 it amounted to
$68,865,963. The establishments numbered 1,909, of which 453 were
in New England, 748 in the middle, 479 in the western, 2 in the
Pacific, and 227 in the southern States. The aggregate capital
invested in the business was $35,520,527, and it employed 28,780
male and 20,120 female hands, 639,700 spindles, and 16,075 looms,
which worked up more than eighty million pounds of wool, the value
of which, with other raw materials, was $40,360,300. The foregoing
figures include satinets, Kentucky jeans, and other fabrics of which
the warp is cotton, though usually classed with woollens. In the
^ Preliminary Report on the Eighth Census, i860, (Washington, 1862), 67.
296 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
manufacture of these mixed goods the amount of cotton consumed
is 16,008,625 pounds, which, with 364,036,123 pounds used in making
cotton goods, as previously stated, amounts to 380,044,748 pounds,
or 950,112 bales, exclusive of a considerable quantity used, annually,
in household manufactures, and for various other purposes.
The largest amount of woollens was made in New England, where
the capital was nearly twenty millions of dollars, and the value of
the product $38,509,080, but little less than the total value in 1850.
More than half the capital, and nearly one-half of the product of
New England belonged to Massachusetts, which had 131 factories
of large size. Rhode Island ranked next, and had increased its
manufacture 163 per cent, in ten years, that of Massachusetts being
48 per cent. The value of woollens produced in the middle States was
$24,100,488, in the western $3,718,092, and in the Pacific and southern
$2,538,303. The sectional increase was, in New England 52.1, in the
middle States 54, and in the south 107 — the last showing the greatest
relative increase. Pennsylvania, next to Massachusetts, was the
largest producer, having 447 factories, which made $12,744,373 w^orth
of woollen and mixed fabrics, an increase of 120 per cent. A value
of $8,919,019 was the product of 222 establishments in the city oi
Philadelphia.
The State of New York holds the third rank in relation to thifj
industry, its manufactures amounting to more than nine millions o:
dollars. The woollen manufactures of Maryland exhibit an increase
of 86 per cent. In Ohio, which produced in 1850 a greater value o
woollens than all the other western States, there was a decrease 01
the product of 1850, owing, probably, to the shipments of wool ti
Europe, which, in 1857, was found to be the most profitable dis
position of the rapidly increasing wool crops of that State. L
Kentucky, now the largest manufacturer of wool in the west, thf
product was $1,128,882, and the increase in ten years 40.4 per cent
while in Indiana, which ranks next, it was 31 per cent., and in Mi
souri 18.8, on the product of 1850. . . .
The quantity of wool returned for the whole Union in 1850
upwards of fifty-two and a half millions of pounds. Sheep raisii
has been greatly extended and improved since that date in 01
Texas, California, and other States, and the clip in i860 amounU
to 60,511,343 pounds, an increase of 15.2 per cent, in ten years. TH
yield still falls far short of the consumption, and large quantiti(^
continue to be imported, notwithstanding the amount of territoi
adapted to sheep husbandry. i
THE DEVELOPMENT OF MANUFACTURES 297
IV. Development of the Iron and Steel Industry
View in i860 ^
A third important manufacturing industry was that of iron and steel products.
The United States was dependent on England during the colonial period and for
years afterward for these products, but by i860 this country was producing a
great part of the iron and steel consumed here.
The total value of Agricultural Implements made in i860 was $17,-
802,514, being an increase of 160. i per cent, upon the total value
of the same branch in 1850, when it amounted to the sum of $6,842,61 1.
This manufacture amounted in New England to over two and three-
quarter millions of dollars — an increase of 65.8 per cent. In the
middle States the value was nearly five and a half millions, having
increased at the rate of 122.2 per centum. In the western States,
where the increase was most extraordinary, the value of implements
produced was augmented from $1,923,927 to $7,955,545- The incre-
ment alone in those States was, therefore, only a fraction less than
the product of the whole northern section of the Union in 1850, and
was greater by 313 per cent, than their own manufacture in that
year. In each of the States of Ohio and Illinois, which are the
largest manufacturers in the west, the value of the product exceeded
two and a half millions dollars, being an increase in the former of 382,
and in the latter of 235 per cent, in ten years. Michigan, Indiana,
and Wisconsin increased their production of agricultural implements
1,250,386 and 201 per cent., respectively. While in some of the
southern States there has been a decrease, in Virginia, Alabama,
and Louisiana the increase in this branch has been large, and in Texas,
which reported none in 1850, agricultural implements of the value of
$140,000 were manufactured in i860. The whole value produced in
the southern States in the latter year (including cotton gins) was
$1,582,483, exhibiting an increase of over loi per cent, in the last
decade.
The quantity of Pig Iron returned by the census of i860 was 884,-
474 tons, valued at $19,487,790, an increase of 44.4 per cent, upon the
value returned in 1850. Bar and other Rolled Iron amounted to
406,298 tons, of the value of $22,248,796, an increase of 39.5 per cent,
over the united products of the rolling mills and forges, which in 1850
were of the value of $15,938,786. This large production of over one
and a quarter million of tons of iron, equivalent to 92 pounds for
each inhabitant, speaks volumes for the progress of the nation in
^ Preliminary Report on the Eighth Census, i860. (Washington, 1862), 61-3.
298 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
all its industrial and material interests. The manufacture holds
relations of the most beneficial character to a wide circle of important
interests intimately affecting the entire population; the proprietors and
miners of ore, coal, and limestone lands; the owners and improvers
of woodlands, of raQroads, canals, steamboats, , ships, and of every
other form of transportation; the producers of food, clothing, and
other supplies, in addition to thousands of workmen, merchants,
and capitalists and their families, who have directly participated in
the benefits resulting from this great industry. It has supplied the
material for an immense number of founderies, and for thousands of
blacksmiths, machinists, millwrights, and manufacturers of nails,
hardware, cutlery, edged tools, and other workers in metals, whose
products are of immense aggregate value and of the first necessity.
The production of so large a quantity of iron, and particularly of bar
iron, and the demand for additional quantities from abroad, tell of
the progress of the country in civil and naval architecture and all
the engineering arts; of the construction of railroads and telegraphs,
which have spread like a net over the whole country; of steam-
engines and locomotives; of spinning, weaving, wood, and metaJ
working, milling, mining, and other machinery; and of all the multi
form instruments of science, agriculture, and the arts, both of peac€
and of war; of the manufacture of every conceivable article of con-
venience or luxury of the household, the field, or the factory. The
aggregate statistics of iron exhibit the extent to which the genera
condition of the people has been improved by this great agent o-
civilization during the ten years embraced in this retrospect.
The materials for the manufacture of iron — ore, coal and othi
fuel, water power, etc. — are so diffused, abundant, and cheap t
entire independence of foreign supplies appears to be alike desira
and attainable at no distant period.
Probably no class of statistics possesses more general interest
illustrating the recent progress of the country in all the operati
branches, and in mechanical engineering, than those relating
Machinery. Nearly every section of the country, particularly t
Atlantic slope, possesses a great affluence of water power, which hi
been extensively appropriated for various manufacturing purpose.
The construction of hydraulic machinery, of stationary and locomoti\i'
steam-engines, and all the machinery used in mines, mills, furnace
forges, and factories; in the building of roads, bridges, canals, railway
etc.; and for all other puq^oses of the engineer and manufacture
has become a pursuit of great magnitude. The annual product •
THE DEVELOPMENT OF MANUFACTURES 299
the general machinists' and millwrights' establishments, as returned
in the census of 1850, was valued at $27,998,344. The value of the
same branch, exclusive of sewing-machines, amounted in i860 to
$47,118,550, an increase of over eighteen millions in ten years. The
middle States were the largest producers, having made over 48 per
cent, of the whole, but the southern and western States exhibit the
largest relative increase. The ratio of increase in the several sec-
tions was as follows: New England, 16.4 per cent.; middle States,
55.2; southern, 387; and western, 127 per cent. The Pacific States
produced machinery of* the value of $1,686,510, of which California
made $1,600,510. In Rhode Island the business was slightly dimin-
ished, but in Connecticut it had increased 165 per centum. The great
facilities possessed by New York and Pennsylvania in iron, coal, and
transportation, made them the largest manufacturers of machinery,
which in the former was made to the value of $10,484,863, and in
the latter $7,243,453 — an increase of 24.4 and 75 per cent., respec-
tively. New Jersey raised her product to $3,215,673, an increase
of 261 per cent., while Delaware and Maryland and the District of
Columbia exhibited an increase of 82, 41, and 667 per cent., respec-
tively. In all the southern States the value of the manufacture,
though small, was largely increased; the ratio in Virginia, the largest
producer, being 236 per cent., while in Mississippi, Alabama, and
South Carolina, the next in amount of production, it was 1,626,270,
and 525 per centum, respectively. This was exclusive of cotton-gins,
which were included with agricultural machinery. Ohio was the
largest producer in the west, and the fourth in the Union, having
made to the value of $4,855,005, an increase of 125 per cent, on the
product of 1850. Kentucky ranked next among the western States,
having produced over one million dollars' worth, and increased her
product 213 per cent. Th-e ratio of increase in the other western
States was, in Indiana, 98; in Illinois, 24; Wisconsin, 208; Mis-
souri, 214; and Iowa, 2,910 per cent., respectively; but in Michigan
there was a small decrease in the amount manufactured.
Besides a large amount of machinery and other castings included
in the returns of machine shops, the value of the production of Iron
Foundries, returned by the census of i860, reached the sum of
$27,970,193, an increase of 42 per cent, on the value of that branch
in 1850, which was $20,111,517. New York, whose extensive stove
founderies swell the amount of production in that State, made to
the value of $8,216,124, and Pennsylvania, $4,977,793, an increase
of 39 and 60.9 per cent., respectively.
300 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
With the subject of iron and its various manufactures that of
Fossil Fuel naturally associates itself. The unequalled wealth and
rapid development of the coal fields of the United States as a dynamic
element in our industrial progress affords one of the most striking
evidences of our recent advance. The product of all the coal mines
of the United States, in 1850, was valued at $7,173,750. The annual
value of the anthracite and bituminous coal, according to the Eighth
Census, was over ninete^ millions of dollars. The increase was over
twelve millions of dollars, and was at the rate of 169.9 per cent,
on the product of 1850. It was chiefly produced in Pennsylvania,
Ohio, and Virginia. The coal mined in Pennsylvania, in 1850, was
valued at $5,268,351. In the year ending June i, i860, the State
produced 9,397,332 tons of anthracite, worth $11,869,574, and of
bituminous coal, 66,994,295 bushels, valued at $2,833,859, making a
total value of $14,703,433, or an excess of $7,529,683 over the total
product of the Union in 1850. Of bituminous coal, Ohio raised
28,339,900 bushels, the value of which was $1,539,713; and Virginia,
9,542,627 bushels, worth $690,188. The increase in Ohio was $819,587,1
and in Virginia, $222,780, in the value of mineral fuel, being at thej
rate of 113 per cent, in the former, and 47.6 per cent, in the latter.
The increase in Pennsylvania was 179 per centum on the yield oj
1850-
V. The Leather Industry
Development during the Decade i8jo-i86o ^
The tanning of leather and its manufacture into boots, shoes, and harnesf
formed another important industry. On the one hand the industry touched th
agricultural interests of the country and on the other the manufacturing an
shipping interests.
The production of Leather is also a leading industry of muc
imp)ortance to the agriculturist and stock raiser, as well as to th
commercial interest, inasmuch as it consumes all the material sup
plied by the former, and feeds an active branch of our foreign impoi
trade. The tanning and currying establishments of the United Stat(
produced in 1850 leather, exclusive of Morocco and patent leathe,
to the value of $37,702,333. The product of the same branch in 18^
reached $63,090,751, an increase of nearly 67 per centum. In tli
New England States it was $16,333,871, in the Middle State!
$36,3441548, and in the Western States, $5,986,457; being an il
crease 66.6 per cent., 90.7 and 13.3 in those sections, respective! j
* Preliminary Report on the Eighth Census, i860. (Washington, 1862), 68-9. i
THE DEVELOPMENT OF MANUFACTURES 301
The Pacific States and Territories, (including Utah,) which returned
no leather in 1850, produced in i860 to the value of $351,469. The
largest producers of leather are New York, $20,758,017; Pennsyl-
vania, $12,491,631; and Massachusetts, $10,354,056; an increase in
those States of 111.7, 98.4, and 82.3 per cent., respectively. Includ-
ing Morocco and patent leather the aggregate value produced in
the Union in i860 exceeded sixty-seven millions of dollars.
If we add to the sum total of this manufacture the aggregate
value of all the allied branches into which it enters as a raw material,
or take an account of the capital, the number of hands, and the cost of
labor and material employed in the creation and distribution of its
ultimate products, it is doubtful if any other department of industry
is entitled to precedence over that of leather.
The manufacture of Boots and Shoes employs a larger number of
operatives than any other single branch of American industry. The
census of 1850 showed that there were 11,305 establishments, with a
capital of nearly thirteen millions of dollars, engaged in making boots
and shoes to the value of $53,967,408, and employing 72,305 male
and 32,948 female hands. The returns of i860 show that 2,554
establishments in the New England States employed a capital only
$2,516 less than that of the whole Union at the former date; and with
56,039 male and 24,978 female employes produced boots and shoes
of the value of $54,767,077 or eight hundred thousand dollars more
than the entire value of the business in 1850, and 82.8 per centum
in excess of their own production in that year. Massachusetts in-
creased 92.6 per cent., having made boots and shoes of the value of.
$46,440,209, equal to 86.6 per cent, of the general business in 1850.
The State of New York returned 2,276 factories, with an aggregate
production of $10,878,797; and New England, New York, Pennsyl-
vania, and New Jersey together produced $75,674,946 worth of these
articles, being 40.4 per cent, more than the product of all the States
in 1850, and 67.9 per cent, more than their own manufacture in that
year. The three counties of Essex, Worcester, and Plymouth, in
Massachusetts, produced boots and shoes to the value severally of
about 14I, 9^, and 9^ millions of dollars. The largest production of
any one town was that of Philadelphia, in which it amounted to
$5,329,887; the next that of Lynn, Massachusetts, was $4,867,399;
the third, Haverhill, $4,130,500; the fourth. New York city, $3,869,-
068. The largest production of a single establishment was of one in
North Brookfield, Massachusetts, and amounted to over $750,000.
This establishment was the largest of five the same proprietors had
302 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
in operation that year, the total production whereof was over one
million pairs of boots and shoes, valued at more than thirteen hundred
thousand dollars! Machinery propelled by steam power is now used
in many large manufactories with highly satisfactory results.
VI. The Boston Shoe Trade
ExterU and Value of Shipments in iS^g ^
The center of the shoe trade of the United States was Boston. From the many
factories located in the neighborhood of that city, the shoes were shipped to Boston
for distribution. The extent of the trade was as follows:
The annual shipments of boots and shoes from Boston have reached
the large figure of 723,069 cases. The shipments to domestic markets
during the year 1859, amounted to 714,981 cases; the foreign shipments :
have been 5,078 cases, presenting the above aggregate. We are 1
unable to make an exact comparison with the business of 1858, as our i
weekly railway tables were not commenced until July of that year, j
but we can make a near approximation. The clearances at the [
custom-house in 1858, were 229,780 cases; the shipments by rail for j
the last half of the year were 239,439 cases, and it is probable that |
those of the earlier portion of the year, which usually are somewhat
less, were, in consequence of the previous panic, not more than three-
fourths of that amount. This would give a total of nearly 650,000
cases for 1858. There must have been an increase of at least 75,000 1
cases the past year. i
These figures do not embrace the entire business. The shipments !
to the New England towns, which are kept distinct from the Southern i
and Western freights by the different railway companies, are so fre-j
quent and numerous, and at the same time the gross amount is com- \
paratively so small, and the information of so little value, that we
do not undertake the almost impossible task of including them in
the weekly returns; in fact, by keeping a clerk constantly at the
office of each road, we could scarcely take them from the freight
bills during the busy season without interfering with the business
of the road. Making due allowance for this New England trade
for the impossibility of deciphering obscure figures on the freight bills
for the errors of railroad clerks, and for the clearances by sea t(
Southern ports, which are sometimes entered as merchandise, we shal
find that the sales of Boston dealers the past year have considerabl)
* HufU's Merchants' Magazine. (New York, i860), XLII, 610-3.
THE DEVELOPMENT OF MANUFACTURES 303
exceeded three quarters of a million cases of boots and shoes. An
average of fifty pairs to a case would give us over 37,500,000 pairs,
which, at the estimate of $1 15 per pair, would present an aggregate
value of more than $43,000,000.
The annual table gave the separate shipments for each quarter to
each of 439 towns and villages at the South and West, and the aggre-
gate quarterly shipments to a still larger number of places not speci-
fied, the last being such as received less than twenty cases, with a few
that presented some difficulty in ascertaining with certainty the name
of the town or State, but altogether amounting to only 19,271 cases.
One-fourth of the whole number were sent to New York. Seven of
the markets drew two-thirds of the entire shipments, viz., New York,
182,207 cases; San Francisco, 63,887; Baltimore, 62,464; Phila-
delphia, 59,119; St. Louis, 55,774; Cincinnati, 44,882; and New
Orleans, 37,686 cases. The shipments to Louisville were 21,119; to
Chicago, 19,168; to Charleston, 17,177; and to Nashville, 13,781
cases. Of the others, there were sent to Richmond, Detroit,
Buffalo, Pittsburg, Memphis, and Milwaukee, from 3,000 to 5,000
cases each; to Indianapolis, Savannah, New Albany, St. Joseph,
Portsmouth, O., Lexington, Alton, Keokuk, Troy, and Rochester,
from 2,000 to 3,000 each; and to Albany, Galena, Evansville, Syra-
cuse, Dayton, Lafayette, Ind., Columbus, O., Quincy, 111., Burlington,
Iowa, Dubuque, Norfolk, and Portsmouth, Va., Galesburg, 111., and
Paducah, Ky., from 1,000 to 2,000 cases each. Nineteen other
places received from 500 to 1,000 each, and one hundred and three
places from 100 to 500 cases. The remainder, amounting to 275
places, received from 20 to 100 cases each. Not counting those sent
to the States of New York, Pennsylvania, Maryland, and California,
and classing Missouri and Kentucky with the South, there were
shipped to the Southern States, 185,147 cases; and to the West,
139,762 cases. . . .
VII. Miscellaneous Manufactures
Extent, Variety, and Value in i860 ^
Several manufacturing industries other than those already noticed had become
important by i860.
The increase of Printing Presses in the book and newspaper manu-
facture has been great beyond all precedent, and has exerted the most
^ Preliminary Report on the Eighth Census, i860. (Washington, 1862), 63-5,
67-9.
304 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY |
beneficent influence by cheapening and multiplying the vehicles of
instruction. Its effects are everywhere apparent. Never did an
army before possess so much of cultivated intellect [written during
the first year of the Civil War], or demand such contributions
for its mental food as that now marshalled in its country's
defence. Many of these reading soldiers ripened their intellec-
tual tastes during the last ten years. In fact, many divisions
of our army carry the printing press and type, and the soldiers issue
publications and print the forms for official papers. The press is,
indeed, the great prompter of enterprise. It constantly travels with
the emigrant to diffuse light and intelligence from our remotest
frontiers, where it speedily calls into existence the paper-mill and all
the accessories which it supports in older communities.
In New England, the Middle, and Western States the value of
book, job, and newspaper printing is returned as $39,428,043, of which
eleven millions' worth consisted of books, the value of the latter being
nearly equal to the whole product of the same branch in 1850, which
was returned at $11,586,549. The manufacture of Paper, especially
of printing paper, has increased in an equal ratio, the State of Massa-
chusetts alone producing paper of the value of $5,968,469, being over
58 per cent, of the product of the Union in 1850. New York returned
paper of the value of $3,516,276; Connecticut, $2,528,758; and
Pennsylvania, $1,785,900.
The Sewing Machine has also been improved and introduced, in j
the last ten years, to an extent which has made it altogether a revolu- j
tionary instrument. It has opened avenues to profitable and health- i
ful industry for thousands of industrious females to whom the labors i
of the needle had become wholly unremunerative and injurious in j
their effects. Like all automatic powers, it has enhanced the comforts |
of every class by cheapening the process of manufacture of numerous i
articles of prime necessity, without permanently subtracting from the
average means of support of any portion of the community. It has
added a positive increment to the permanent wealth of the country
by creating larger and more varied applications of capital and skill j
in the several branches to which it is auxiliary. The manufacture'
of the machines has itself become one of considerable magnitude, and!
has received a remarkable impulse since 1850. The returns show ani
aggregate of 1 16,330 machines made in nine States in i860, the value of
which was $5,605,345. A single establishment in Connecticut manu-
factured machines to the value of over $2,700,000, or nearly one-half
of the whole production in that year. During the year 1861 sewingl
THE DEVELOPMENT OF MANUFACTURES 305
machines to the value of over $61,000 were exported to foreign coun-
tries. It is already employed in a great variety of operations and
upon different materials, and is rapidly becoming an indispensable
and general appendage to the household.
Among the branches of industry which have been signally promoted
by the introduction of the sewing-machine is the manufacture of
men's and women's Clothing for sale, which has heretofore ranked
with the cotton manufactures in the number of hands — two-thirds
of them females — and the cost of labor employed. The increase
of this manufacture has been general throughout the Union, and in
the four cities of New York, Philadelphia, Cincinnati, and Boston,
amounted in value to nearly forty and one-quarter millions of dollars,
or over 83 per cent, of the product of the whole Union in 1850. The
manufacture of shirts and collars, of ladies' cloaks and mantillas —
a new branch which has received its principal impulse within the last
ten years — and of ladies' and gentlemen's furnishing goods generally,
form very large items in the general aggregate of this branch. They
severally employ extensive and numerous establishments, many of
them in our large cities with heavy capital. In Troy, New York, the
value of shirt collars alone annually manufactured is nearly $800,000,
approximating in value to the product of the numerous and extensive
iron founderies which have been a source of wealth to that city.
The influence of improved machinery is also conspicuously ex-
hibited in the manufacture of sawed and planed lumber, in which the
United States stands altogether unrivalled, as well for the extent
and perfection of the mechanism employed as the amount of the
product. This reached, in 1850, the value of $58,521,976, and, in
i860, $95,912,286, an increase of 64 per cent, in the last decade. The
western States alone, in the latter year, produced lumber to the
value of $33,274,793, an increase of $18,697,543, or 128 per cent,
over their manufacture in 1850. The Pacific States and Territories
produced to the value of $6,171,431, and the southern $17,941,162,
a respective increase of $3,841,826 and $9,094,686 in those sections,
being a ratio of 162.7 and 102.3 per centum.
Several branches of manufacture have an intimate relation to
agriculture and the landed interests, and by their extension powerfully
promote those interests as well as that of commerce. Surpassing all
others of this or any other class in the value of products and of the
raw material consumed, is the manufacture of flour and meal. The
product oi flour and grist mills in 1850 reached a value of nearly one
hundred and thirty-six millions of dollars, while in i860 the returns
3o6
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
exhibit a value of $223,144,369 — an increase of $87,246,563, or 64.2
per cent, in the last ten years. The production and increase of the
several sections were as follows:
Value of flour
and meal
Increase
Per cent,
increase
New England States
$11,155,445
79,086,411
96,038,794
30,767,457
6,096,262
$4,834,959
10,653,232
53,364,802
14,185,640
4,207,930
76.5
15-5
I2s 0
Middle States
Western States
Southern States.
855
222.8
Pacific States
The largest mill is in Oswego, New York, which in i860 produced
300,000 barrels of flour; the next two, in Richmond, Virginia, made
190,000 and 160,000, respectively; and the fourth, in New York City,
returned 146,000 barrels. The value of annual production of each
ranged from one million and a half to one million dollars. . . .
The manufacture of Linen Goods has made but little progress in
this country. A few mills, chiefly in Massachusetts, make crash and
other coarse fabrics; the largest two in that State produced six mil-
lion yards in i860. Others are extensively engaged in making twines,
shoe and other threads. It is to be regretted that the manufacture
of flax has not attained greater magnitude in a country where the
raw material is so easily and cheaply grown. Farmers throughout
the west have raised the crop simply for the seed, and thrown out the
fibre as valueless.
The manufacture of fabrics from Flax Cotton has been commenced,
and success in a new branch of industry is confidently expected. The
inventive genius of our countrymen has perfected machinery for the
preparation of flax for spinning, which can be furnished, it is alleged,
at as low a rate as the product of southern cotton fields.
The manufacture of Sewing Silks is extensively carried on in this
country. Including tram, organzine, &c., the production exceeded
five million dollars in the States of Connecticut, New Jersey, Massa-
chusetts, Pennsylvania, and New York — their relative values bein.i^^
in the order mentioned. Ribbons are made to a small extent, but
the chief manufactures of silk consist of ladies dress trimmings, coach
lace, &c., of which the cities of Philadelphia and New York produce
to the value of $1,260,725 and $796,682, res])ectively. . . .
India Rubber Goods were ?ii;u]r < liirllv in Connecticut, N«'\v ^'ork,
I
THE DEVELOPMENT OF MANUFACTURES 307
New Jersey, and Massachusetts to the value of $5,729,900, an increase
of 90 per cent, in the last decade.
The value of Cabinet Furniture made in i860 in the New England,
Middle and Western States reached the sum of $22,701,304, an in-
crease of 39.8 per cent, over the product of those States in 1850, and
exceeding the production of the whole Union in 1850. New York
returned in i860 furniture of the value of $7,175,060, (or 40.6 per cent,
of the whole amount made in 1850.) Massachusetts, $3,365,415, and
Pennsylvania, $2,938,503. The growth of this branch keeps pace
with the increase of population and wealth, and serves to swell the
amount of our exports. It gives employment at remunerative prices
to skilled labor, which it attracts from the crowded labor-markets
of Europe.
Our advance in wealth and refinement is attested by the rapid
increase in the manufacture of piano fortes and other Musical Instru-
ments. New England, New York, and Pennsylvania produced
musical instruments to the value of $5,791,807; an increase of 150 per
cent, over their own production in 1850, and 124 over the whole
value of that branch in the Union in the same year. New York
alone made $3,392,577 worth, being $811,862 more than the whole
amount returned in 1850. In this branch, our manufacturers have
achieved marked success. Without claiming for them- superiority
over their brethren in France and Germany, it is admitted that church
organs and other instruments made in this country are better suited
to the climate, and in other respects fully equal to those which come
from the most celebrated establishments in Europe.
The increased amount of the precious metals and the greater
ability of all classes to indulge the promptings of taste or luxury,
have added greatly to the manufacture of Jewelry, and of all kinds of
gold, silver, and plated wares. In the New England and Middle
States, the production of jewelry and watches reaches over eleven
minions in value; of silver, silver-plated wares, &c., over six and one-
half millions; making nearly eighteen millions of dollars, exclusive
of gold leaf and foil, and the assaying and refining the precious metals,
exceeding the product of the whole Union, in 1850, by $7,016,908 in
value; an increase of over sixty-four per cent., and of seventy per
cent, on the production of those States in that year. The production
of cheap jewelry has been greatly augmented by recent improvements
in electro-metallurgy.
The manufacture of American Watches, commenced within the
last ten years in Boston as an experiment, has proved eminently
3o8
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
successful. Unable, heretofore to compete with the low-priced labor
of European workmen, our ingenious countrymen have perfected
machinery, by the aid of which watch movements are fabricated
equal, if not superior, to the hand-made. The continued growth of
this branch will diminish the importation of foreign watches, and may,
at no distant period, earn for our country a reputation in this manu-
facture equal to that she enjoys in the kindred branch of clock-making.
Gold and silver watch cases are now produced to a very large extent,
chiefly in the cities of Philadelphia, New York, and Newark.
0l
CHAPTER X
THE TARIFF, 1808-1860
I. Encouragement to Manufactures
Gallatin's Plans, 1810 ^
Following the Embargo Act in 1807 the industry of the country slowly under-
went important Changes. Part of the capital that had been employed in shipping
and commerce wks invested in manufactures, while another part found its way
into western agriculture. By 18 10 it had become obvious that the government
ought to encourage the former industry, and in a report on manufactures in that
year. Secretary Gallatin had the following to say on the subject:
The revenue of the United States, being principally derived from
duties on the importation of foreign merchandise, these have also
operated as a premium in favor of American manufactures, whilst,
on the other hand, the continuance of peace, and the frugality of
Government, have rendered unnecessary any oppressive taxes, tend-
ing materially to enhance the price of labor, or impeding any species
of industry.
No cause, indeed, has, perhaps, more promoted, in every respect,
the general prosperity of the United States, than the absence of those
systems of internal restrictions and monopoly which continue to dis-
figure the state of society in other countries. No law exists here,
directly or indirectly, confining man to a particular occupation or
place, or excluding any citizen from any branch, he may, at any time,
think proper to pursue. Industry is, in every respect, opened to all,
without requiring any previous regular apprenticeship, admission, or
license. Hence the progress of America has not been confined to the
improvement of her agriculture, and to the rapid formation of new
settlements and States in the wilderness; but her citizens have ex-
tended their commerce through every part of the globe, and carry
on with complete success, even those branches for which a monopoly
had heretofore been considered essentially necessary.
^ Gallatin's Report on Manufactures, 18 10. American State Papers
(Washington, 1834), Series Finance, II, 430.
3IO READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
The same principle has also accelerated the introduction and
progress of manufactures, and must ultimately give in that branch, as
in all others, a decided superiority to the citizens of the United States
over the inhabitants of countries oppressed by taxes, restrictions and
monopolies. It is believed that, even at this time, the only powerful
obstacle against which American manufactures have to struggle,
arises from the vastly superior capital of the first manufacturing
nation of Europe, which enables her merchants to give very long
credits, to sell on small profits, and to make occasional sacrifices.
The information which has been obtained is not sufficient to sub-
mit, in conformity with the resolution of the House, the plan best
calculated to protect and promote American manufactures. The
most obvious means are bounties, increased duties on importation,
and loans by Government.
Occasional premiums might be beneficial; but a general system
of bounties is more applicable to articles exported than to those
manufactured for home consumption.
The present system of duties may, in some respects, be equalized
and improved, so as to protect some species of manufactures without
effecting the revenue. But prohibitory duties are liable to the treble
objection of destroying competition, of taxing the consumer, and of
diverting capital and industry into channels generally less profitable
to the nation than those which would have naturally been pursued
by individual interest left to itself. A moderate increase will be less
dangerous, and, if adopted, should be continued during a certain
period; for the repeal of a duty once laid, materially injures those
who have relied on its permanency, as has been exemplified in the
salt manufacture. . . .
II. Need of Protection
Recommendation of President Madison, i8ij^
The first definite news of the treaty with Great Britain reached the United
States early in 1815. The provisions of the treaty naturally affected the course
the President of the United States would take toward the protection of manu-
factures. In his next annual message to Congress (December, 181 5), President
Madison recommended the imjx)sition of a protective (arifT that would proici t
American manufactures in K<-'neral, but more i)articularly those which would niaki
the United States independent of foreign powers in case of war. He said:
In adjusting the duties on imports, to the object of revenue, the'
influence of the tariff on manufactures will necessarily present itself
* Messages and Papers of the Presidents. Kdited by James I). Richanl^on
(O^rHr-t.-^-l ,w,.. roo,3), I, 567.
THE TARIFF
311
for consideration. However wise the theory may be which leaves to the
sagacity and interest of individuals the application of their industry
and resources, there are in this, as in other cases, exceptions to the
general rule. Besides the condition which the theory itself implies,
of a reciprocal adoption by other nations, experience teaches that so
many circumstances must concur in introducing and maturing manu-
facturing establishments, especially of the more complicated kinds,
that a country may remain long without them, although sufficiently
advanced, and, in some respects, even peculiarly fitted for carrying
them on with success. Under circumstances giving a powerful
impulse to manufacturing industry, it has made among us a progress,
and exhibited an efficiency, which justifies the belief that, with a pro-
tection not more than is due to the enterprising citizens whose inter-
ests are now at stake, it will become, at an early day, not only safe
against occasional competitions from abroad, but a source of domestic
wealth, and even of external commerce. In selecting the branches
more especially entitled to the public patronage, a preference is
obviously claimed by such as will relieve the United States from a
dependence on foreign supplies, ever subject to casual failures, for
articles necessary for the public defence, or connected with the primary
wants of individuals. It will be an additional recommendation of
particular manufactures, where the materials for them are exten-
sively drawn from our agriculture, and consequently impart and in-
sure to that great fund of national prosperity and independence an
encouragement which cannot fail to be rewarded.
III. Arguments for a Protective Tariff
Views of Congress, 1816^
That part of President Madison's message relating to a protective tariff was
referred to a house committee for consideration. A majority of the committee
was from the manufacturing states, but several of its members were from the ex-
treme south. This committee received petitions from manufacturers, and after
considering them in relation to the demands of the public finances recommended
that a protective tariff be enacted as follows :
The States that are most disposed to manufactures, as regular
occupaticns, will draw from the agricultural States all the raw
materials which they want, and not an inconsiderable portion also
of the necessaries of life; while the latter will, in addition to the
^ House Committee Report on Domestic Manufactures. Annals of Congress,
1815-16 (Washington, 1854), 962-4.
312 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
benefits which they at present enjoy, always command, in peace or
in war, at moderate prices, every species of manufacture that their
wants may require. Should they be inclined to manufacture for
themselves, they can do so with success, because they have all the
means in their power to erect and to extend at pleasure manufacturing
establishments. Our wants being supplied by our own ingenuity
and industry, exportation of specie, to pay for foreign manufactures,
will cease.
The value of American produce, at this time exported, will not
enable the importers to pay for the foreign manufacture imported.
Whenever the two accounts shall be fairly stated, the balance against
the United States will be found many millions of dollars. Such is
the state of things, that the change must be to the advantage of the
United States. The precious metals will be attracted to them; the
diffusion of which, in a regular and uniform current, through the great
arteries and veins of the body politic, will give to each member health
and vigor.
In proportion as the commerce of the United States depends on
agriculture and manufactures as a common basis, will it increase and
become independent of those revolutions and fluctuations, which
the ambition and jealousy of foreign Governments are too apt to
produce. Our navigation will be quickened; and supported as it
will be by internal resources, never before at the command of any
nation, will advance to the extent of those resources.
New channels of trade to enterprise, no less important than
productive, are opening, which can be secured only by a wise and
prudent policy appreciating their advantage.
If want of foresight should neglect the cultivation and improve-
ment of them, the opportune moment may be lost, perhaps, for
centuries, and the energies of this nation be thereby prevented from
developing themselves, and from making the boon which is profTered
our own. By trading on our own capital, collisions with other na-
tions, if they be not entirely done away, will be greatly diminished.
This natural order of things exhibits the commencement of a
new epoch, which promises peace, security, and repose, by a firm
and steady reliance on the produce of agriculture; on the treasures
that are embosomed in the earth; on the genius and ingenuity of our
manufactures and mechanics; anrl on the intelligence and enterjirise
of our merchants.
The Government, possessing the intelligence and the art of im-
proviriL' the resources of the nation, will increase its efficient ])owcrs,
THE TARIFF 313
and, enjoying the confidence of those whom it has made happy,
will oppose to the assailant of the nation's rights the true, the only
invincible aegis, the unity of will and strength. Causes producing
war will be few. Should war take place, its calamitous consequences
will be mitigated, and the expenses and burdens of such a state of
things will fall with a weight less oppressive and injurious on the
nation. The expenditures of the last war were greatly increased
by a dependence on foreign supplies. The prices incident to such a
dependence will always be high.
Had not our nascent manufacturing establishments increased the
quantity of commodities at that time in demand, the expenditures
would have been much greater, and consequences the most fatal and
disastrous — alarming even in contemplation — would have been the
fate of this nation. The experience of the past teaches a lesson
never to be forgotten, and points emphatically to the remedy. A
wise Government should heed its admonitions, or the independence
of this nation will be exposed to ''the shafts of fortune."
IV. The Tariff Controversy of 1824
A . The ''A merican System ' ' ^
Congress, in 1816, provided for a 25 per cent, duty on cottons and woolens, and
This rate of duty was re-established in 1 818. At the earlier date the members of
Congress were in general agreement that certain manufacturing industries of the
country needed to be protected, but by 1824, serious opposition to this principle
had risen in the south and in certain sections of New England.
During the debates on the tariflf in 1824, the representatives from these two
sections very generally opposed, while those from the Middle States and the
west favored, the principles of protection. Henry Clay, of Kentucky, laid down
the principle of the "American System." He argued that the prosperity of the
whole country depended on protection. In his opinion the system would provide
not only work for laborers, but also markets for the farmers' produce.
Two classes of politicians divide the people of the United States.
According to the system of one, the produce of foreign industry
should be subjected to no other impost than such as may be necessary
to provide a public revenue; and the produce of American industry
should be left to sustain itself, if it can, with no other than that inci-
dental protection, in its competition, at home as well as abroad, with
rival foreign articles. According to the system of the other class,
whilst they agree that the imposts should be mainly, and may, under
any modification, be safely relied on as a fit and convenient source of
^ Annals of Congress, 1823-4 (Washington, 1856), 1962-72.
314 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
public revenue, they would so adjust and arrange the duties on
foreign fabrics as to afford a gradual but adequate protection to
American industry, and lessen our dependence on foreign nations, by
securing a certain, and, ultimately, a cheaper and better supply of our
own wants from our own abundant resources. Both classes are equally
sincere in their respective opinions, equally honest, equally patriotic,
and desirous of advancing the prosperity of the country. . . .
. . . The greatest want of civilized society is a market for the sale
and exchange of the surplus of the produce of the labor of its members.
This market may exist at home or abroad, or both, but it must exist
somewhere, if society prospers; and wherever it does exist, it should
be competent to the absorption of the entire surplus of production.
It is most desirable that there should be both a home and a foreign
market. But, with respect to their relative superiority, I cannot
entertain a doubt. The home market is first in order, and paramount
in importance. . . .
Both the inability and the policy of foreign Powers, then, forbid
us to rely upon the foreign market as being an adequate vent for the
surplus produce of American labor. Now, let us see if this general
reasoning is not fortified and confirmed by the actual experience of
this country. If the foreign market may be safely relied upon as
furnishing an adequate demand for our surplus produce, then the
official document will show a progressive increase, from year to }'ear
in the exports of our native produce. ... If, on the contrary, we
shall find from them that, for a long term of past years, some of our
most valuable staples have retrograded, some remained stationary,
and others advanced but little, if any, in amount, with the exception
of cotton, the deductions of reason and the lessons of experience will
alike command us to withdraw our confidence in the competency of
the foreign market. The total amount of all our exports of domestic
produce for the year, beginning in 1795, and ending on the 30th
September, 1796, was $40,764,097. Estimating the increase according
to the ratio of the increase of our population, that is at 4 per cent, per
annum, the amount of the exports of the same produce in the year
ending on the 30th September last, ought to have been $85,420,861.
It was in fact only $47,155,408. Taking the average of five years,
from 1803 to 1807, inclusive, the amount of native produce exported
was $43,202,751 for each of those years. Estimating what it ought t(
have been, during the last year, applying the principle suggested tc
that amount, there should have been exported $77,766,751, instcac
of $47,155,408. . . .
THE TARIFF 315
•Is this foreign market, so incompetent at present, and which,
Hmited as its demands are, operates so unequally upon the productive
labor of our country, likely to improve in future? If I am correct
in the views which I have presented to the Committee,- it must become
worse and worse. What can improve it? Europe will not abandon
her own agriculture to foster ours. We may even anticipate that she
will more and more enter into competition with us in the supply of
the West India market. That of South America, for articles of
subsistence, will probably soon vanish. The value of our exports, for
the future, may remain at about what it was last year. But if we
do not create some new market ; if we persevere in the existing pur-
suits of agriculture; the inevitable consequence must be to augment
greatly the quantity of our produce, and to lessen its value in the
foreign market. . . .
The creation of a home market is not only necessary to procure
for our agriculture a just reward of its labors, but it is indispensable
to obtain a supply of our necessary wants. If we cannot sell, we can-
not buy. That portion of our population (and we have seen that it
is not less than four-fifths) which makes comparatively nothing that
foreigners will buy, has nothing to make purchases with from for-
eigners. It is in vain that we are told of the amount of our exports,
supplied by the planting interest. They may enable the planting
interest to supply all its wants; but they bring no ability to the
interests not planting, unless, which cannot be pretended, the plant-
ing interest was an adequate vent for the surplus produce of the labor
of all other interests. It is in vain to tantalize us with the greater
cheapness of foreign fabrics. There must be an ability to purchase,
if an article be obtained, whatever may be the price, high or low, at
which it is sold. And a cheap article is as much beyond the grasp
of him who has no means to buy, as a high one. Even if it were
true that the American manufacturer would supply consumption at
dearer rates, it is better to have his fabrics than the unattainable
foreign fabrics; for it is better to be ill supplied than not sup-
plied at all. . . . But this home market, highly desirable as it is,
can only be created and cherished by the protection of our own
legislation against the inevitable prostration of our industry, which
must ensue from the action of foreign policy and legislation. The
effect and the value of this domestic care of our own interests will
be obvious from a few facts and considerations. Let us suppose
that half a million of persons are now employed abroad, in fabricating
for our consumption those articles of which, by the operation of this
3i6 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
bill, a supply is intended to be provided within ourselves. That half
a million of persons are, in efTect, subsisted by us; but their actual
means of subsistence are drawn from foreign agriculture. If we could
transport them to this country, and incorporate them in the mass oi
our own population, there would instantly arise a demand for an
amount of provisions equal to that which would be requisite for their
subsistence throughout the whole year. That demand, in the article
of flour alone, would not be less than the quantity of about 900,000
barrels, besides a proportionate quantity of beef and pork, and othc
articles of subsistence. But 900,000 barrels of flour exceeded the
entire quantity exported last year, by nearly 150,000 barrels. What
activity would not this give? What cheerfulness would it not commu-
nicate to our now dispirited farming interest? But if, instead of these
five hundred thousand artisans emigrating from abroad, we give, by
this bill, employment to an equal number of our ow^n citizens now
engaged in unprofitable agriculture, or idle, from the want of business,
the beneficial effect upon the productions of our farming labor would
be nearly doubled. The quantity w^ould be diminished by a sub-
traction of the prgduce from the labor of all those who should be!
diverted from its pursuits to manufacturing industry, and the value
of the residue would be enhanced, both by that diminution and the
creation of the home market to the extent supposed.
B. A New Englander^s Views on Protection ^
Daniel Webster of Massachusetts opposed a protective tariff at this time,
he gave two reasons for so doing as follows:
Being intrusted with the interests of a district highly commercia
and deeply interested in manufactures also, I wish to state my opinioi
on the present measure; not as on a whole, for it has no entire art
homogeneous character; but as on a collection of different enact
ments, some of which meet my approbation, and some of whid
do not. . . .
. . . [l]n the first place, what is the condition of our commerce)
Here we must clearly perceive that it is not enjoying that rich harves'
which fell to its fortune during the continuance of the European war
It has been greatly depressed, and limited to small profits. Still, i
is elastic and active, and seems capable of recovering itself in soi
* Annals of Congress, 1823-4 (Washington, 1856), 2027, 2034-5, 2053-
2056-7.
THE TARIFF 317
measures from its depression. The shipping interest, also, has suffered
severely, still more severely, probably, than commerce. If anything
should strike us with astonishment, it is that the navigation of the
United States should be able to sustain itself. Without any govern-
ment protection whatever, it goes abroad to challenge competition
with the whole world; and, in spite of all obstacles, it has yet been
able to maintain 800,000 tons in the employment of foreign trade.
How, sir, do the ship-owners and navigators accomplish this? How
is it that they are able to meet, and in some measure overcome,
universal competition? Not, sir, by protection and bounties, but
by unwearied exertion, by extreme economy, by unshaken persever-
ance, by that manly and resolute spirit which relies on itself to pro-
tect itself. These causes alone enable American ships still to keep
their element, and show the flag of their country in distant seas, . . .
I need not say that the navigation of the country is essential to
its honor and its defense. Yet, instead of proposing benefit for it in
this hour of its depression, we propose by this measure to lay upon
it new and heavy burdens. In the discussion, the other day, of that
provision of the bill which proposes to tax tallow for the benefit of
the oil merchants and whalemen, we had the pleasure of hearing
eloquent eulogiums upon that portion of our shipping employed in
the whale fishery, and strong statements of its importance to the public
interest. But the same bill proposes a severe tax upon that interest
for the benefit of the iron manufacturer and the hemp grower. So
that the tallow chandlers and soapboilers are sacrificed to the oil
merchants, in order that these again may contribute to the manu-
facturers of iron and the growers of hemp.
If such be the state of our commerce and navigation, what is
the condition of our home manufactures? How are they amidst the
general depression ? Do they need further protection ? and if any,
how much ? On all these points, we have had much general state-
ment, but little precise information. In the very elaborate speech
of Mr. Speaker, [Henry Clay of Kentucky] we are not supplied with
satisfactory grounds of judging in these various particulars. Who
can tell, from anything yet before the committee, whether the pro-
posed duty be too high or too low, on any one article ? Gentlemen
tell us that they are in favor of domestic industry ; so am I. They
would give it protection ; so would I. But then all domestic industry
is not confined to manufactures. The employments of agriculture,
commerce, and navigation, are all branches of the same domestic
industry; they all furnish employment for American capital and
3i8 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
American labor. And when the question is, whether new duties
shall be laid, for the puq^ose of giving further encouragement to
particular manufactures, every reasonable man must ask himself,
both, whether the proposed new encouragement be necessary, and,
whether it can be given without injustice to other branches of
industr}-. . . .
I will now proceed, sir, to state some objections which I feel,
of a more general nature, to the course of Mr. Speaker's obser-
vations.
He seems to me to argue the question as if all domestic industry
were confined to the production of manufactured articles; as if the
employment of our own capital, and our own labor, in the occupations
of commerce and navigation, were not as emphatically domestic
industry as any other occupation. Some other gentlemen, in the
course of the debate, have spoken of the price paid for every foreign
manufactured article, as so much given for the encouragement of
foreign labor, to the prejudice of our own. But is not every such
article the product of our own labor as truly as if we had manufac-
tured it ourselves? Our labor has earned it, and paid the price for
it. It is so much added to the stock of national wealth. If the com-
modity were dollars, nobody would doubt the truth of this remark:
and it is precisely as correct in its application to any other commodity
as to silver. One man makes a yard of cloth at home; another
raises agricultural products, and buys a yard of imported cloth.
Both these are equally the earnings of domestic industry, and the only
questions that arise in the case are two: the first is, which is the best
mode, under all the circumstances, of obtaining the article; the second
is, how far this first question is proper to be decided by the government,
and how far it is proper to be left to individual discretion. There is
no foundation for the distinction which attributes to certain employ-
ments the peculiar appellation of American industry; and it is, in
my judgment, extremely unwise, to attempt such discrimina-
tions. . . .
Let me now ask, sir, what relief this bill proposes to some of those
great and essential interests of the country, the condition of which
has been referred to as proof of national distress; and which con-
dition, although I do not think it makes out a case of distress, yet
does indicate depression.
And first, as to our foreign trade. The Speaker has stated
that there has been a considerable falling off in the tonnage em-
ployed in that trade. This is true, lamentably true. In my opinion.
THE TARIFF 319
it is one of those occurrences which ought to arrest our immediate,
our deep, our most earnest attention. What does this bill propose,
for its relief? Sir, it proposes nothing but new burdens. It pro-
poses to diminish its employment, and it proposes, at the same time,
to augment its expense, by subjecting it to heavier taxation. Sir,
there is no interest, in regard to which a stronger case for protection
can be made out, than the navigating interest. Whether we look at
its present condition, which is admitted to be depressed; the number
of persons connected with it, and dependent upon it for their daily
bread; or its importance to the country in a political point of view,
it has claims upon our attention which cannot be exceeded. But
what do we propose to do for it? I repeat, sir, simply to burden and
to tax it. By a statement which I have already submitted to the
Committee, it appears that the shipping interest pays, annually,
more than half a million of dollars in duties on articles used in the con-
struction of ships. We propose to add nearly, or quite, fifty per cent,
to this amount, at the very moment that we bring forth the languish-
ing state of this interest, as a proof of national distress. Let it be
remembered that our shipping employed in foreign commerce, has,
at this moment, not the shadow of government protection. It goes
abroad upon the wide sea to make its own way, and earn its own
bread, in a professed competition with the whole world. Its resources
are its own frugality, its own skill, its own enterprise. It hopes to
succeed, if it shall succeed at all, not by extraordinary aid of govern-
ment, but by patience, vigilance, and toil. This right arm of the
nation's safety strengthens its own muscles by its own efforts, and by
unwearied exertion in its own defense becomes strong for the defense
of the country.
No one acquainted with this interest can deny that its situation,
at this moment, is extremely critical. We have left it hitherto to
maintain itself or perish; to swim if it can, and to sink if it cannot.
But at this moment of its apparent struggle, can we, as men, can we,
as patriots, add another stone to the weight that threatens to carry
it down? Sir, there is a limit to human power and to human effort.
I know the commercial marine of this country can do almost every-
thing, and bear almost everything. Yet some things are impossible
to be done; and some burdens may be impossible to be borne; and as
it was the last ounce that broke the back of the camel, so the last tax,
although it were even a small one, may be decisive as to the power of
our marine to sustain the conflict in which it is now engaged with
all the commercial nations on the globe.
320 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
C. A Southern View on the Tariff ^
The southern representatives very generally opposed the protective tariflf. One
of them, George McDuffie, of South Carolina, spoke against it as follows:
Looking to the operation of this measure upon the different classes
of the community, it may be fairly stated as its general result, that it
will sacrifice the laboring classes for the benefit of the capitalists.
And when I say capitalists, I include as well those who employ capital
in some of the products of agriculture, as in manufactures. You
propose to protect, by duties, not only manufactures, but wool,
hemp, and even grain. Ridiculous as the duty upon this last article
is, it serves admirably to illustrate the genius of the system.
Although the manufacturing interest makes the most prominent
figure in this scheme of protection, the question is no longer between
the manufacturing and agricultural interests, but between all those
who produce more than they consume of the articles subject to duty,
and those who purchase that surplus production. From this it is
obvious, that but a very small part of the community can enjoy
the benefit of this system, which operates as a permanent tax upon
the remainder. As to the manufacturers we know their number is
exceedingly small in comparison with the aggregate of our population.
But the smallness of the number of farmers who can be benefited by
this bill, is not so obvious. There exists a delusion on this point,
which is easily removed. It is supposed that the great mass of the
farmers will participate in the bounties provided. But every prac-
tical observer must know, in relation to wool, for example, that a
great majority of the farmers can produce no more than they consume
in their own families. It will be the more wealthy farmers, there-
fore, who will realize the advantages, such as they may be, of thisj
compromise with the manufacturers, while the small farmers and th<
whole class of mere laborers will be compelled to bear the burdens
the system, such as they certainly are, without the slightest equivalent.]
No man has pretended, no man will venture to assert, that tl
price of labor will be increased by this measure. That, sir, the thii
which most deserves encouragement, is left unbountied to its fat
I do pronounce it, that this is a combination, not only of the fei
against the many, but of the wealthy against the poor; we take froi
those who have not, and give to those who have. I speak withstudit
precision when I say, that tliosc who consumi' wliaf tlicv do not make,!
' Annals of f ' t'--- rV?.; j i W .i>u.iiKi"i', i'\-,vv, ..'.4-1, ..'4-'*
THE TARIFF 321
are taxed for the benefit of those who make what they do not consume.
These are the true antagonist powers of this system. . . .
It would be some consolation to me, sir, if I could believe that the
heavy impositions, which must operate so oppressively upon the part
of the Union I have the honor to represent, would produce an equiva-
lent benefit to other portions of the Union. If my constituents
must be sacrificed, it would in some degree soothe their injured feel-
ings, if they could have this excuse, at least, for quietly submitting
to their fate, hard as it is, and unjust as they believe it to be. But
even this humble consolation is denied us. We are doomed to suffer,
under a clear conviction that our sufferings will administer no relief
to the distresses, whether real or imaginary, of any portion of our
fellow-citizens. We are to be made the victims of a system "which
not enricheth them, but makes us poor indeed" — a system which
wages war, not against our enemies, but our friends; not against the
hostile regulations of other countries, but against the advantages of
our natural position in the world, and the munificent bounties of an
all-wise Providence — a system which has originated in discontent,
and must inevitably end in disappointment. . . .
V. Free Trade Arguments
Memorial on Free Trade, 18 ji ^
After the passage of the " abomination " tariff bill in 1828, those opposed to the
system set about to educate public opinion as to the merits of free trade. Ac-
cordingly, in 1 83 1, a free trade convention was held in the city of Philadelphia,
and at its request a free trade memorial was drawn up by Albert Gallatin and
presented to Congress. The important parts of this memorial are as follows:
We are not called upon to discuss the abstract question, whether
ttnother mode of taxation would be more eligible than the impost, or
whether an unrestrained intercourse between all nations, free of the
payment of any duties on imports, would be best calculated to pro-
mote the industry and prosperity of all. On that subject, the experi-
ence of forty years is conclusive so far as relates to the United States.
The people prefer, in time of peace, duties raised on the importation
of foreign merchandise, to any internal tax, direct or indirect. Whether
for good or for evil, that system affords an encouragement to domestic
manufactures not less efficient for being incidental. Duties on imports,
amounting on an average to about 20 per cent, on the value, appear
^ Gallatin's Free Trade Memorial. Senate Documents, 183 1-2 (Washington,
1832), I, Doc. 55, pp. 6-8, II.
322 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
necessary to the support of Government. Although they may, to that
extent, by diverting national industry from its natural channels,
render it less productive; although they may, to that extent, lay a
tax on the consumers in addition to that which is paid to Govern-
ment; although they operate unequally on different sections of th(
country; all your memorialists ask, is, that the evil shall not be aggra
vated by an inequality in the rates of duty. The question then at
issue is, simply whether the amount wanted shall be so raised as to fall
equally upon all the consumers, or, in other words, on the community,
and so as to encourage equally every branch of industry, or whether
certain branches shall receive special protection by high and some-
times prohibitory duties. . . .
Let it, however, be recollected, that even the general benefit aris-
ing to the country at large, may not always be a sufficient justification
of great and important deviations from the equal and uniform system
of taxation. A government which acknowledges the principle that
no individual can be divested of his property for public purpose
without indemnity, cannot claim the right to do that indirectly, which
it is forbidden to do directly. A system calculated to lay permanent
burdens, greatly unequal and oppressive on some classes of society.
or on a particular section of the country, would be radically unjust.
and altogether indefensible, even though it might be, attended with
some advantages to the community, considered as a whole. But
whether such advantages are in fact realized; whether, on any sup
position, they ever can produce a profit equal to the actual national
loss arising even from the indispensable duty of 20 to 25 per cent,
must be first examined.
It is self-evident that the industry of a country is most profitabl}
employed, or, in other words, that a country acquires the greates"
wealth, and its general prosperity is most advanced, in proportion a:
its capital and labor are most productive.
It is not less obvious that, if a given amount of capital and labo
produces in the same time, a less quantity of a certain commodity
than could have been purchased with that quantity of another art id'
which might have been produced in the same time by the same amoun !
of capital and labor, there has been a misapplication of such capita'
and labor, and a national loss equal to the difference between th;
quantity produced, and that which might have been purchased, wit^i
the proceeds of the same capital and labor otherwise applied.
If the price at which a commodity can be afforded by the perso
who undertakes to produce it is higher than that at which it may b(
THE TARIFF
323
or might have been purchased from others, the difference of price is
the measure of the national loss incurred by his misapplication of
capital and labor to the production of that commodity. . . .
The difference between the price at which a manufacturer can
afford to sell the whole amount of the commodities produced by him
in one year, and that at which the same quantity of the same articles
may be, or might have been, purchased from others, is therefore
equal to the annual national profit or loss resulting from his appli-
cation of capital and labor to that instead of any other branch of
industry.
When the new manufacturer has to compete with others of the
same country, or, if there is no duty on imports, with foreign manu-
facturers, as it is impossible for him to sell cloth of the same quality
at a higher price than it can be obtained from others, the loss must
necessarily fall on him. This is not the less a public loss on that
account. On whomsoever this may fall, a diminution of the quantity
or exchangeable value of the commodities which, with the same
capital and labor, otherwise applied, might have been produced, is
so much retrenched from what would otherwise have been an accumu-
lation of capital or national wealth. . . .
It is impossible that the state of the country should have been
such as that its capital and labor could not have been more advan-
tageously applied, than to branches of industry, which, left to them-
selves, were attended with actual loss, without a corresponding great
and sensible diminution in the demand for capital and the wages
of labor, neither of which has been felt. So long as those wages
suffer no diminution, and so long as those employed in commercial
and even agricultural pursuits continue to borrow large capitals at the
rate of six per cent, a year, it is clear proof that those pursuits afford
profits at least equal to that rate of interest, and that an application
of capital and labor to the production of objects, on which, if not
artificially protected, a loss is experienced, is not at all necessary.
VI. The Tariff and Sectionalism
A View of the Situation, 1824-18JJ ^
By 1832 the issue of a protective tariff had become distinctively sectional. The
south felt that it was being discriminated against by Congress. The southern
^ Thirty Years' View. By Thomas H. Benton (New York, 1854-6), I, 97,
101-2.
324 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
states lagged behind their northern neighbors industrially, and the protective tariff
was assigned by their statesmen as the reason for this difference in prosperity.
Senator Benton of Missouri put the claim of the south as follows:
The question of a protective tariff had now not only become
political, but sectional. In the early years of the federal government
it was not so. The tariff bills, as the first and the second that were
passed, declared in their preambles that they were for the encourage-
ment of manufactures, as well as for raising revenue; but then the
duties imposed were all moderate — such as a revenue system really
required; and there were no ^^minimums,'^ to make a false basis for
the calculation of duties, by enacting that all which cost less than a
certain amount should be counted to have cost that amount; and b(
rated at the custom-house accordingly. In this early period the
Southern States were as ready as any part of the Union in extendin<:
the protection to home industry which resulted from the imposition
of revenue duties on rival imported articles, and on articles necessary
to ourselves in time of war; and some of her statesmen were amongsi
the foremost members of Congress in promoting that policy. A>
late as 1816, some of her statesmen were still in favor of protection,
not merely as an incident to revenue, but as a substantive object:
and among these was Mr. Calhoun, of South Carolina — who evei
advocated the minimum provision — then for the first time intro-
duced into a tariff bill, and upon his motion — and applied to thf
cotton goods imported. After that year (1816) the tariff bills took a
sectional aspect — the Southern States, with the exception of Loui-
siana (led by her sugar-planting interest), against them: the New
England States also against them: the Middle and Western State-
for them. After 1824 the New England States (always meaning the
greatest portion when a section is spoken of) classed with the pro-
tective States — leaving the South alone, as a section, against that
policy. . . .
Allusions were constantly made [in the debates] to the combination
of manufacturing capitalists and politicians in pressing this bill.
There was evidently foundation for the imputation. The scheme
of it had been conceived in a convention of manufacturers in the State
of Pennsylvania, and had been taken up by politicians, and was pushed
as a party measure, and with the visible purpose of influencing the
presidential election. In fact these tariff bills, each exceeding tht
other in its degree of protection, had become a regular appendage ol
our presidential elections — coming round in every cycle of four years
with th.'it returning ('\'ent. The year 1S16 was the starting ])oint
THE TARIFF 325
1820, and 1824, and now 1828, having successively renewed the
measure, with successive augmentations of duties. The South be-
lieved itself impoverished to enrich the North by this system; and
certainly a singular and unexpected result had been seen in these
two sections. In the colonial state, the Southern were the rich part
of the colonies, and expected to do well in a state of independence.
They had the exports, and felt secure of their prosperity: not so of
the North, whose agricultural resources were few, and who expected
privations from the loss of British favor. But in the first half cen-
tury after Independence this expectation was reversed. The wealth
of the North was enormously aggrandized: that of the South had
declined. Northern towns had become great cities: Southern cities
had decayed, or become stationary; and Charleston, the principal
port of the South, was less considerable than before the Revolution.
The North became a money-lender to the South, and southern citi-
zens made pilgrimages to northern cities, to raise money upon the
hypothecation of their patrimonial estates. And this in the face of
a southern export since the Revolution to the value of eight hundred
millions of dollars ! — a sum equal to the product of the Mexican
mines since the days of Cortez! and twice or thrice the amount of
their product in the same fifty years. The Southern States attributed
this result to the action of the federal government — its double
action of levying revenue upon the industry of one section of the
Union and expending it in another — and especially to its protective
tariffs. To some degree this attribution was just, but not to the
degree assumed; which is evident from the fact that the protective
system had then only been in force for a short time — since the year
181 6; and the reversed condition of the two sections of the Union
had commenced before that time. Other causes must have had some
effect: but for the present we look to the protective system; and,
without admitting it to have done all the mischief of which the South
complained, it had yet done enough to cause it to be condemned by
every friend to equal justice among the States — by every friend to
the harmony and stability of the Union — by all who detested sec-
tional legislation — by every enemy to the mischievous combination
of partisan politics with national legislation. And this was the feeling
with the mass of the democratic members who voted for the tariff
of 1828, and who were determined to act upon that feeling upon the
overthrow of the political party which advocated the protective
system; and which overthrow they believed to be certain at the
ensuing presidential election.
320 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
VII. A Temporary Adjustment of Conflicting Interests
The Compromise Tar if of i8jj ^
South Carolina's opposition to the tariff measureof 1832, and her threat to with-
draw from the Union unless the tariff was modified, caused Congress in 1833 to
lower the duties on imported articles. Mr. Clay brought forward a compromise
measure, in which, many of his friends declared, he abandoned his American system.
Clay, himself, denied that such was the case; he insisted that a modification of
the tariff would not destroy the system, but save it; that it would allay distrust
and allow time for its principles to become known throughout the country. Por-
tions of Mr. Clay's speech are as follows:
In presenting the modification of the tariff laws which I am about
to submit, I have two great objects in view. My first object looks to 1
the tariff. I am compelled to express the opinion, formed after the
most deliberate reflection, and on a full survey of the whole country,
that, whether rightfully or wrongfully, the tariff stands in imminent!
danger. . . . The fall of the policy, sir, would be productive of conse-j
quences calamitous indeed. When I look to the variety of interests!
which are involved, to the number of individuals interested,
amount of capital invested, the value of the buildings erected, and]
the whole arrangement of the business for the prosecution of tl
various branches of the manufacturing art which have sprung uf j
under the fostering care of this government, I cannot contemplat
any evil equal to the sudden overthrow of all those interests,
tory can produce no parallel to the extent of the mischief which woul<
be produced by such a disaster. . . .
It is well known that the majority of the dominant party is adj
verse to the tariff. . . . But for the exertions of the other party,
tariff would have been long since sacrificed. Now let us look at
composition of the two branches of Congress at the next sessic
In this body we lose three friends of the protective policy, withoi
being sure of gaining one. Here, judging from the present appearam
we shall, at the next session, be in the minority. In the House il
is notorious that there is a considerable accession to the number c|
the dominant party. How, then, I ask, is the system to be sustaim
against numbers, against the whole weight of the administrati<
against the united South, and against the increased impending dar
or civil war? . . .
... I have been represented as the father of this system, an^
am charged with an unnatural abandonment of my own oflsprij
' Congressional Debates, 18^2-3 CWashinL'lon, 1833), 462, 733.
THE TARIFF 327
I have never arrogated to myself any such intimate relation to it.
I have, indeed, cherished it with parental fondness, and my affection
is undiminished. But in what condition do I find this child? It is in
the hands of the Philistines, who would strangle it. I fly to its
rescue, to snatch it from their custody, and to place it on a bed of
security and repose for nine years, where it may grow and strengthen,
and become acceptable to the whole people. I behold a torch about
being applied to a favorite edifice, and I would save it, if possible, before
it was wrapt in flames, or at least preserve the precious furniture which
it contains. I wish to see the tariff separated from the politics of
the country, that business men may go to work in security, with some
prospect of stability in our laws, and without everything being staked
on the issue of elections, as it were on the hazards of the die.
VIII. Reaction from Protection
Arguments for Lower Duties on Imports, 184^ ^
The Compromise Tariff Act of 1833 provided that the duties exceeding 20 per
• cent, should be reduced gradually until on July i, 1842, they should be at a uni-
i form level of 20 per cent. By that time, however, the Whigs were in power,
and as soon as the term of the Compromise had been fulfilled, they imposed a
protective tariff similar to the one of 1832. In 1844 the Democrats were suc-
cessful; and that party was pledged to lower the tariff. Accordingly, Secretary of
the Treasury, Robert J. Walker, in his annual report proposed to Congress a radical
reduction in the tariff, and the arguments supporting his proposal were as follows:
The receipts for the first quarter of this year are less, by $2,011,-
885 90, than the receipts of the same quarter last year. Among the
causes of decrease is the progressive diminution of the importation
of many highly-protected articles, and the substitution of rival
domestic products. For the nine months ending June 30, 1843,
since the present tariff, the average of duties upon dutiable imports was
equal to 37.84 yo P^^ cent.; for the year ending June 30, 1844,
33-85 i^TF per cent.; and for the yearending June 30, 1845, 29.90 per
cent. — showing a great diminution in the average percentage,
owing in part to increased importation of some articles bearing the
lighter duties, and decreased importation of others bearing the
higher duty. . . .
In suggesting improvements in the revenue laws, the following
principles have been adopted:
Treasury Report, 1845 (Washington, 1846), 3-5, 7-10.
328 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY ^
1
I St. That no more money should be collected than is necessary
for the wants of the government, economically administered.
2d. That no duty be imposed on any article above the lo\\«
rate will yield the largest amount of revenue.
3d. That below such rate discrimination may be made, descending
in the scale of duties; or, for imperative reasons, the article may be
placed in the list of those free from all duty.
4th. That the maximum revenue duty should be imposed on
luxuries.
5th. That all minimums, and all specific duties, should be abol-
ished, and ad valorem duties substituted in their place — care being
taken to guard against fraudulent invoices and under-valuation, and
to assess the duty upon the actual market value.
6th. That the duty should be so imposed as to operate as equally
as possible throughout the Union, discriminating neither for nor
against any class or section.
No horizontal scale of duties is recommended; because such a
scale would be a refusal to discriminate for revenue, and might sink
that revenue below the wants of the government. Some articles
will yield the largest revenue at duties that would be wholly or par-
tially prohibitory in other cases. Luxuries, as a general rule, willj
bear the highest revenue duties: but even some very costly luxuries,!
easily smuggled, will bear but a light duty for revenue; whilst other
articles, of great bulk and weight, will bear a higher duty for revenue.
There is no instance within the knowledge of this department of any!
horizontal tariff ever having been enacted by any one of the nations!
of the world. There must be discrimination for revenue, or the bur-j
den of taxation must be augmented, in order to bring the same amount
of money into the treasury. It is difficult, also, to adopt any arbi-
trary maximum to which an inflexible adherence must be demand<
in all cases. Thus, upon brandy and spirits, a specific duty, varyii
as an equivalent ad valorem from 180 to 261 per cent., yields
large revenue; yet no one would propose either of these rates as
maximum. These duties are too high for revenue, from the encour-j
agement they present for smuggling these baneful luxuries; yet
duty of 20 per cent, upon brandy and spirits would be far beloi
the revenue standard, would greatly diminish the income on th(
imix)rts, require increased burdens upon the necessaries of life, am
would revolt the moral sense of the whole community. Th<
are many other luxuries which will bear a much higher duty f<
revenue than 20 per cent.; and the only true maxmium is tnat whi(
THE TARIFF 329
experience demonstrates will bring, in each case, the largest revenue
at the lowest rate of duty. Nor should maximum revenue duties
be imposed upon all articles; for this would yield too large an
I income, and would prevent all discrimination within the revenue
standard, and require necessaries to be taxed as high as luxuries.
But, whilst it is impossible to adopt any horizontal scale of
duties, or even any arbitrary maximum, experience proves that, as
, a general rule, a duty of 20 per cent, ad valorem will yield the
largest revenue. There are, however, a few exceptions above, as well
as many below this standard. Thus, whilst the lowest revenue duty
on most luxuries exceeds 20 per cent., there are many costly articles
of small bulk, easily smuggled, which would bring, perhaps, no
revenue at a duty as high as 20 per cent.; and even at the present
rate of 7 J per cent., they yield, in most cases, a small revenue;
whilst coal, iron, sugar, and molasses, articles of great bulk and
I weight, yielded last year six millions of revenue, at an average
' rate of duty exceeding 60 per cent, ad valorem. There duties are
far too high for revenue upon all these articles, and ought to be
reduced to the revenue standard; but if Congress desire to obtain
the largest revenue from duties on these articles, those duties,
at the lowest rate for revenue, would exceed 20 per cent, ad
valorem. . . .
In arranging the details of the tariff, it is believed that the maxi-
mum revenue duties should be imposed upon luxuries. It is deemed
just that taxation, whether direct or indirect, should be as nearly as
practicable in proportion to property. If the whole revenue were
raised by a tax upon property, the poor, and especially those who
live by the wages of labor, would pay but a very small portion of such
tax; whereas, by the tariff, the poor, by the consumption of various
imports, or domestic articles enhanced in price by the duties, pay a
much larger share of the taxes than if they were collected by an assess-
ment in proportion to property. To counteract, as far as possible,
this effect of the tariff — to equalize its operation, and make it ap-
proximate as nearly as may be to a system of taxes in proportion to
property — the duties upon luxuries, used almost exclusively by the
rich, should be fixed at the highest revenue standard. This would
not be discriminating in favor of the poor, however just that might
■ be within the revenue limit; but it would mitigate, as far as prac-
ticable, that discrimination against the poor which results from every
tariff, by compelling them to pay a larger amount of taxes than if
assessed and collected on all property in proportion to its value. In
330 READINGS IN ECOxNOMlC HISTORY
accordance with these principles, it is believed that the largest prac-
ticable portion of the aggregate revenue should be raised by maximum
revenue duties upon luxuries, whether grown, produced, or manu-
factured at home or abroad.
An appeal has been made to the poor, by the friends of protection,
on the ground that it augments the wages of labor. In reply, it is
contended that the wages of labor have not augmented since the tariff
of 1842, and that in some cases they have diminished.
When the number of manufactories is not great, the power of the
system to regulate the wages of labor is inconsiderable; but as
the profit of capital invested in manufactures is augmented by the
protective tariff, there is a corresponding increase of power, unti]
the control of such capital over the wages of labor becomes irresistible.
As this power is exercised from time to time, we find it resisted by
combinations among the working classes, by turning out for higher
wages, or for shorter time; by trades-union; and in some countries,
unfortunately, by violence and bloodshed. But the government,
by protective duties, arrays itself on the side of the manufacturing
system, and, by thus augmenting its wealth and power, soon termin-
ates in its favor the struggle between man and money — between
capital and labor. When the tariff of 1842 was enacted, the maximum
duty was 20 per cent. By that act, the average of duties on the pro-
tected articles was more than double. But the wages of labor did
not increase in a corresponding ratio, or in any ratio whatever. On
the contrary, whilst wages in some cases have diminished, the prices
of many articles used by the working classes have greatly appre-
ciated.
A protective tariff is a question regarding the enhancement of the
profits of capital. That is its object, and not to augment the wages of
labor, which would reduce those profits. It is a question of percent-
age, and is to decide whether money vested in our manufactures
shall, by special legislation, yield a profit of ten, twenty, or thirty per
cent., or whether it shall remain satisfied with a dividend equal to that
accruing from the same capital invested in agriculure, commerce, or
navigation.
The present tariff is unjust and unequal, as well in its details as in
the principles upon which it is founded. On some articles the duties
are entirely prohibitory, and on others there is a partial prohibition.
It discriminates in favor of manufactures, and against agriculture, by
imposing many higher duties ui)on the manufactured fabric than upon
the agricultural product out of which it is made. It discriminates
THE TARIFF 331
in favor of the manufacturer, and against the mechanic, by many
higher duties upon the manufacture than upon the article made out of
it by the mechanic. It discriminates in favor of the manufacturer,
and against the merchant, by injurious restrictions upon trade and
commerce; and against the ship-building and navigating interest, by
heavy duties on almost every article used in building or navigating
vessels. It discriminates in favor of manufactures, and against exports,
which are as truly the product of American industry as manufactures.
It discriminates in favor of the rich, and against the poor, by high
duties upon nearly all the necessaries of life, and by minimums and
specific duties, rendering the tax upon the real value much higher on
the cheaper than upon the finer article.
Minimums are a fictitious value, assumed by law, instead of the
real value; and the operation of all minimums may be illustrated by
a single example. Thus, by the tariff of 1842, a duty of 30 per cent, ad
valorem is levied on all manufactures of cotton; but the law further
provides that cotton goods "not dyed, colored, printed, or stained, not
exceeding in value twenty cents per square yard, shall be valued at
twenty cents per square yard." If, then, the real value of the cheapest
cotton goods is but four cents a square yard, it is placed by the law at
the false value of twenty cents per square yard, and the duty levied
on the fictitious value — raising it five times higher on the cheap
article consumed by the poor, than upon the fine article purchased
by the more wealthy. . . .
At least two thirds of the taxes imposed by the present tariff are
paid, not into the treasury, but to the protected classes. The revenue
from imports last year exceeded twenty-seven millions of dollars.
This, in itself, is a heavy tax; but the whole tax imposed upon the
people by the present tariff is not less than eighty-one millions of
dollars, — of which twenty-seven millions are paid to the govern-
ment upon the imports, and fifty-four millions to the protected
classes, in enhanced prices of similar domestic articles.
This estimate is based upon the position that the duty is added to
the price of the import, and also of its domestic rival. If the import
is enhanced in price by the duty, so must be the domestic rival; for,
being like articles, their price must be the same in the same market.
The merchant advances in cash the duty on the import, and adds the
duty, with a profit upon it, and other charges, to the price — which
must therefore be enhanced to that extent; unless the foreign pro-
ducer had first deducted the duty from the price. But this is impos-
sible; for such now is, and long has been, the superabundance of
332 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
capital and active competition in Europe, that a profit of 6 per cent, in
any business is sufficient to produce large investments of money in that
business; and if, by our tariff, a duty of 40 per cent, be exacted on the
products of such business, and the foreign producer deducts that duty
from his previous price, he must sustain a heavy loss. This loss would
also soon extend beyond the sales for our consumption to sales to our
merchants of articles to be re-exported by them from our ports with
a drawback of the duty, which would bring down their price throughout
the markets of the world. But this the foreign producer cannot
afford. The duty, therefore, must be added to the price, and paid by
the consumer, — the duty constituting as much a part of the price as
the cost of production. . . .
No prejudice is felt by the Secretary of the Treasury against
manufacturers. His opposition is to the protective system, and not
to classes or individuals. He doubts not that the manufacturers are
sincerely persuaded that the system which is a source of so much
profit to them is beneficial also to the country. He entertains a con-
trary opinion, and claims for the opponents of the system a settled
conviction of its injurious effects. Whilst a due regard to the just and
equal rights of all classes forbids a discrimination in favor of the manu-
factures, by duties above the lowest revenue limit, no disposition is
felt to discriminate against them by reducing such duties as operate
in their favor below that standard. Under revenue duties, it is
believed, they would still receive a reasonable profit — equal to that
realized by those engaged in other pursuits; and it is thought they
should desire no more, at least through the agency of governmental
power. Equal rights and profits, so far as laws are made, best conform
to the principles upon which the constitution was founded, and with
an undeviating regard to which all its functions should be exercised
— looking to the whole country, and not to classes or sections.
Soil, climate, and other causes, vary very much, in different coun-
tries, the pursuits which are most profitable in each; and the prosper-
ity of all of them will be best promoted by leaving them, unrestricted
by legislation, to exchange with each other those fabrics and products
which they severally raise most cheaply. This is clearly illustrated
by the perfect free trade which exists among all the States of the
Union, and !)y the acknowledged fact that any one of these States
would \)c injured by imposing duties uj)on the products of the others.
It is generally conceded that reciprocal free trade among nations
would best aclvance the interest of all. . . .
THE TARIFF 333
IX. Arguments for Protection
The Case Stated, 1849^
After the passage of the Walker Tariff Act of 1846, friends of protection kept up
an agitation for an increase in the tariff rates. Henry C. Carey, of Philadelphia,
one of the best known American economists of the time, writing in 1849,
argued for protection as follows:
Why is protection needed? Why cannot trade with foreign
nations be carried on without the intervention of custom-house offi-
cers? Why is it that that intervention should be needed to enable the
loom and the anvil to take their natural places by the side of the
plough and the harrow? Such are the questions which have long occu-
pied my mind, and to the consideration of which I now invite my
readers.
Of the advantage of perfect freedom of trade, theoretically consid-
ered, there could be no doubt. The benefit derived from such freedom
in the intercourse of the several States, was obvious to all ; and it would
certainly seem that the same system so extended as to include the
commerce with the various states and kingdoms of the world could not
fail to be attended with similar results. Nevertheless, every attempt
at so doing had failed. The low duties on most articles of mer-
chandise in the period between 1816 and 1827, had produced a state
of things which induced the establishment of the first really pro-
tective tariff, that of 1828. The approach to almost perfect freedom
of trade in 1840, produced a political revolution, and a similar but
more moderate measure, led to the revolution of last year. These
were curious facts, and such as were deserving of careful examination.
It may be assumed as an universal truth, that every step made in
the right direction will be attended with results so beneficial as to pave
the way for further steps in the same direction, and that every one
made in the wrong direction will be attended with disadvantageous
results tending to produce a necessity for a retrograde movement.
The compromise bill, in its final stages, was a near approach to perfect
freedom of trade, the highest duty being only 20 per cent. Believing
it to be a step in the right direction, one of the enthusiastic advocates
of perfect freedom of trade proposed, soon after its passage, that,
commencing with 1842, there should be a further reduction of one
per cent, per annum for twenty years, at the end of which time all
^ Miscellaneous Works (Harmony of Interests). By Henry C. Carey (Phila-
delphia, 1872), 3-10.
334 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
necessity for custom-houses would have disappeared. With the
gradual operation of the earlier stages of that bill there was, however,
produced a state of depression so extraordinary as to lead to a polit-
ical change before reaching its final stages, and the duties had scarcely
touched the point of 20 per cent, before they were raised to 30, 50, 60,
or more, by the passage of the tariff of 1842. With the election of
1844, the friends of free trade were restored to power, and two years
afterwards was passed the tariff of 1846 — the free-trade measure —
in which the revenue duty on articles to be protected was fixed at
thirty per cent. Here was a retrograde movement. Instead of pass-
ing from twenty downwards, we went up to thirty, and thus was
furnished an admission that so near an approach to free trade with
foreign nations as was to be found in twenty per cent, duties had not
answered in practice. Since then, it has been admitted, even by the
most decided free-trade advocates, that on certain commodities even
thirty per cent, was too low, and within six months from the date of
the passage of the act of 1846, its author proposed to increase a variety
of articles to thirty-five and forty per cent. Here was another retro-
grade movement. It is now admitted that there are other articles
the duties on which require to be raised, and daily experience goes to
prove that such must be the case, or we must abandon some of the
most important branches of industry. The tendency is, therefore,
altogether backward. Thirty per cent, duty is now regarded as almost
perfect freedom of trade, and instead of proposing a further annual
reduction, each year produces a stronger disposition for a considerable
increase. In all this, it is impossible to avoid seeing that there is great
error somewhere, and almost equally impossible to avoid feeling a
desire to understand why it is that the approaches towards freedom
of trade with foreign nations have so frequently failed, and why it is
that every strictly revenue tariff is higher than that which preceded it.
With a view to satisfy myself in regard thereto, I have recently
made the examination, before referred to, of our commercial policy
during the last twenty-eight years, commencing with 182 1, being the
earliest in relation to which detailed statements have been published.
Before commencing to lay before you the results obtained, it may be
well to say a few words as to the merits claimed by tho two parties
for their respective systems.
The one party insists that protection is "a war ujion labour and
capital," and that by compelling the application of both to pursuits
that would otherwise be unproductive, the amount of necessaries,
comforts, and conveniences of life obtainable by the labourer is dimin-
THE TARIFF 335
ished. The other insists that by protecting the labourer from com-
petition with the ill-fed and worse-clothed workmen of Europe, the
reward of labour will be increased. Each has thus his theory, and
each is accustomed to furnish facts to prove its truth, and both can
do so while limiting themselves to short periods of time, taking at
some times years of small crops, and at others those of large ones, and
thus it is that the inquirer after truth is embarrassed. No one has
yet, to my knowledge, ever undertaken to examine all the facts during
any long period of time, with a view to show what have been, under
the various systems, the powers of the labourer to command the neces-
saries and comforts of life. One or other of the systems is true, and
that is true under which labour is most largely rewarded: that under
which the labourer is enabled to consume most largely of food, fuel,
clothing, and all other of those good things for the attainment of which
men are willing to labour. If, then, we can ascertain the power of
consumption at various periods, and the result be to show that it has
invariably increased under one course of action, and as invariably
diminished under another, it will be equivalent to a demonstration of
the truth of the one and the falsehood of the other. To accomplish
this, has been the object of the inquiry in which I have recently been
engaged.
It is necessary now to show what have been the distinguishing fea-
tures of the several systems that have been in operation during the
period to be examined. They are as follows: —
First. The tariff of 1816 was a planters' and farmers' measure.
Cotton and coarse cotton cloths were carefully protected. Iron itself
was well protected, but almost all manufactures of iron, the commodi-
ties for the production of which pig or bar iron could be used, were
admitted at 20 per cent. Wool paid 15 per cent. Blankets and
woolen and stuff goods paid 15 per cent., and finer goods 25 per cent.,
until 1819, after which they paid but 20 per cent. Spirits paid a heavy
specific duty, for the benefit of the farmers; but paper, hats, caps,
manufactures of leather, types, and manufactured articles generally,
paid only from 20 k) 30 per cent. Coal paid 5 cents per bushel, but
the commodities in the manufacture of which coal was to be used paid
ad valorem duties. Protection was thus given to the coarse com-
modities that least required it, and refused to those for the produc-
tion of which the coarser ones were to be used. As a matter of
course, its protective features were totally inoperative.
Second. That of 1824, under which iron was, as before, well pro-
tected, but manufactures of iron, and of metals generally, were ad-
336 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY d|
mitted at 25 per cent. Wool was raised to 20 per cent., to increase, by
successive stages, until it reached 30 per cent. Coarse woolens were
fixed permanently at 25 per cent. Finer ones were to rise gradually
until they reached t,!^^ per cent. Carpets paid from 20 to 50 cents
per square yard. Hams paid 3, and butter 5 cents per pound. Pota-
toes 10, oats 10, and wheat 25 cents per bushel; while scythes, spades,
shovels, and other things requisite for the raising of wheat and pota-
toes, paid 30 per cent. Spirits were carefully protected. Bolting
cloths paid 15 per cent. Sail-duck, Osnaburgs, &c., 15 per cent.
Cotton cloths paid 25 per cent., with a minimum of 30 cents per
yard. The general features of this law did not vary mate-
rially from those of that of 18 16, although protection was slightly
increased.
Third. The first tariff thoroughly protective, and so intended to
be, was that of 1828. It continued until 1832, when was passed the
first of two laws by which the whole policy of the country was changed.
This series constitutes stage the
Fourth. By the act of July 14, 1832, railroad iron was admit tcrl
free of duty. Axes, spades, &c., as before, 30 per cent. Bar and
iron were carefully protected, but a large portion of the commodiU' >
for which they were needed were thus admitted without duty, or it
the same rate as under our present free-trade tariff. Tea and coi
were free. Silks paid 10 per cent. Wool was protected, but wor>
stuff goods were admitted at 10 per cent. Cotton goods paid 25 ;
cent., with minimums of 30 cents for plain, and 35 for prints. 'I
continued in force until the following March, when was passed
Compromise Ad, under which linens, stuff goods, silks, and other arti
cles were admitted free of duty, and one-tenth of the excess over
per cent, reduced from all other commodities, to take effect Decern 1
1833, with a further similar reduction every two years until i^
when one-half of the remaining surplus was to be reduced, and i:
other half in 1842, when no duty would exceed 20 per cent.
Fifth. The protective tariff of 1842, which was followed by
Sixth. The free trade tariff of 1846, now in txistence.
We have thus had six different systems, but the first and seconci
differ from each other so little that it is unnecessary to separate thf
years falling under them, whereas the early years of the Compromise
differ so essentially from the two latter that it is expedient to separate
them. I shall therefore group the results as follows: —
First. The tariffs of 1816 and 1824, ending with 1829.
Second. That of 1S28, commencing with October, 1829, and end-
THE TARIFF 337
ing with the period at which the Compromise began to become opera-
tive, October, 1834.
Third. The Compromise, commencing with 1835 and ending with
1841.
Fourth. The years 1842 and 1843, the period immediately pre-
ceding and following the passage of the act of 1842, being that of the
strictly revenue tariff of 20 per cent.
Fifth. The tariff of 1842, commencing June, 1843, and ending
June, 1847.
Sixth. That of 1846, commencing June, 1847, and coming down
to the present time.
i
■b^
CHAPTER XI
THE WESTWARD MOVEMENT, 1817-1860
I. The Effect on the People of Territorial Expansion
An Explanation of American Characteristics, 184J ^
Americans have repeatedly been charged by European observers with emphasiz-
ing size and magnitude rather than quality, and because of their activities in accu-
mulating wealth they have been called mean .and sordid. These same obser\'e'-=
have compared the finer tastes of their own countrymen with those of the Americ ;
to the disadvantage of the latter; and in so doing, they have failed to take iin^
account the differences in national life and environment. The Americans con-
quered a continent in a century and the conquest left thern little time for those
activities in which the higher classes of Europeans indulged themselves. The very
magnitude of the conquest caused them unconsciously to stress size, and in manyyj
cases to express the liveliest contenipt for the higher refinements of life. In
short they were fully occupied in getting a Fiving.
GENTLEMEN travellers and bookmakers, by way of reproach, call
us the trading-nation, a people devoted to gain; they lament our want
of chivalry, our neglect of light amusements; they wonder we do not
better support our theatres and other places of public resort, and say
we are too sombre and gloomy by half for our national health. They
compare New York with London and Paris; Boston and Philadelphia,
with Liverpool; new cities, with old; a new, young people, seeking
their natural level, with the old, settled, and unchanging population
of Europe. Partly for the instruction of such persons, and partly for
the satisfaction of dwelling upon this honorable characteristic of our
country, we will consider these charges in our pages.
But a few years ago, the country we inhabit was a wilderness.
Hardly was the land cleared on the coast, and dotted with towns and
villages; hardly had New York, and Boston, and Philadelphia, aSi-
sumed the name and character of cities, before the great west became
an object of interest to our own people, and to the immigrant from
foreign lands. The story of the resources of this continent reached
» Hunt's Merchants' Magazine (New York, 1843), VIII, 164-8. Article by
J. N. Bellows, of New Hampshire.
THE WESTWARD MOVEMENT
339
the ears of the starved and oppressed European; a gleam of hope
lighted up his care-worn features, as he heard of a free life on a fertile
soil, by the banks of wide, navigable rivers, skirted by woods that
abounded with game, where food, fuel, and peace, could be had for
the asking. We had enough to do to welcome our new friends, as
every one knows. The wants of a population, increasing in the west
by magical numbers, made demands upon the comparatively old
portions of the country to supply them. The great canal, connecting
the lakes with the Hudson, was one of these wants. The genius of a
Clinton devised and planned it, and it is the pattern improvement of
this time. The magnitude, completion, and success of it, has given
hope and confidence to every subsequent effort' of the kind; and it
has been of as great benefit in its consequences upon internal improve-
ments, as it has as a high-way for the wealth of the western valleys.
We were, besides, destitute of manufactures, (thanks to the early
parental guidance of the mother country,) and were obliged to seek
abroad for other means of supplying our new demands. We had no
time to give that attention to manufactures which we saw, at a glance,
were the great interests of our country. Our population came upon
us too rapidly for this; they could not stand naked, and without tools
and machinery, while we were putting up the mills to manufacture
clothing and supplies for them. They must be imported; the capital
of the country was invested in shipping, and the young men flocked
to the city and became ship-owners and importers. Our inland towns
suffered, and still suffer, the draining off of many of their most prom-
ising youth, whom the hope of speedy fortunes and high wages drew
to the seaports. Trade became the business of the country from an
absolute necessity.
As soon as we had breathing-time, we turned our attention to
manufactures; that is, as soon as the young men could be spared,
and the capital could be spared or made. Then, in places where
water-power was abundant, towns and villages sprung into being, and
employed not only the labors of the young men, but the young women,
to such an extent, that cooks and chambermaids became scarce; and,
at this time, the majority of those who are technically called servants,
in the houses of the opulent, are foreigners, the natives being employed,
for the most part, on the farms and in the factories.
Our position with regard to other people, has forced us to do every-
thing in a hurry* Our company came so soon, we had hardly time
to put ourselves into trim to receive visitors. As a nation, we are
much in the same predicament with the lady without "help," who
340 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
consequently does her own work and "chores," upon whom a carriage
load of fashionable visitors arrives while she is cooking dinner. Hear-
ing the bell, and thinking it is the children just come home from school,
she runs to open the door herself. Finding her mistake, she, like a
sensible woman, covers her confusion not by apologies and lies, but by
making herself as agreeable as she can, and her guests go away and call
her a slattern and other hard names; when, if they knew all the cir-
cumstances, they would consider her an angel. We trust, from this
statement of facts, that it can be seen why we are a trading-nation ; why
so large a part of our population is engaged in a way that make them
averse to spending their leisure time at theatres and in jovial parties.
If we are, then, by the necessity of the case, in consequence of our
youth, much engaged in trade, it can easily be seen why we are not,
in the popular sense of the word, a chivalrous people. War, love of
conquest, the profession of arms, nurture chivalry. The chivalry of
the ancients, and the remains of the spirit of knighthood in Europe,
at this time, is the refinement which taste throws over a radically bad
principle; an attempt to adorn, with a show of justice and equity,
what, at the bottom, is but a blood-thirsty preference of self to human
rights. It is all of a piece with the drapery of thrones and the imposing
magnificence of rank and title, w^hich exist only by cruel want some-
where. For we suppose that it must be a law of nature, that every
waste and extravagance deprives some one of comfort; and the pres-
ent condition of the laboring classes in Europe, is a sufficient verifi-
cation of our remark. We are not a chivalrous people, then, and do
not wear swords and plumes; we discountenance duelling, and Hve
under the protection of laws we have ourselves made. We do not
recognise any difference between the law of honor and the law of God,
and say that every custom, inconsistent with the latter, is of course
so with the former. We take credit for having made this advance in
morals, and believe it is the natural fruit of our Christian origin.
Now, the Spaniard is a chivalrous character, and the decayed
nobility of Italy are patterns of chivalry, though steeped to the lips
in poverty; " too proud to work, they nobly starve." Thank heaven!
there is none of this spirt in our industrious population; and, least of
all, is there any one so destitute of common sense as to view the em-
ployments of trade as beneath his dignity. We read of such men in
fiction, and even then we give them a fictitious jiity. That any poor,
mortal man, born into this world of trial and struggle, should have the
notion that some accident of birth exempts him from exertion, and that
an honest livelihood, wrought out by his own energies, is inferior tO
THE WESTWARD MOVEMENT 341
dronish dependence and proud poverty, fills us with commiseration
and disgust. That trade should be undervalued by the very men
who owe their greatness to it; that any Englishman, of all others,
should sneer at what has made his country what she is, is surprising
indeed. For, to what does England owe her rank among the nations
of the globe, if not to the extensive enterprise of her merchants?
Take from her her commerce, and how infinitely inferior she would
be to France, one-fourth of whose soil is worth more than all the Brit-
ish empire can boast of possessing. The territory of England is the
Atlantic and Pacific oceans; her ships are the ploughs of these watery
soils, and from them she reaps her great harvests. Her wealth is her
power, and it is a wealth heaped up for her by her merchants. Why
has Spain lost the position she once held among nations? Her com-
merce has been interrupted by fatal intestine wars. Property has had
no security; and the nation, step by step, has declined. France has
not yet recovered from her wasting revolutions, and the derangement
of her trade is one of the sorest evils of her commotions. It is the
condition of the mercantile class that furnish the best test of the con-
dition of a country, because every nation owes its life to this interest;
and it is because we know this by experience and philosophy, that
the majority of our people turn their attention to trade as the surest
road to national prosperity.
It is somewhat remarkable, that the English people hold, as a
standing jest, the tendency to bargaining and money-getting among
the Scotch. Whether they allow other people to laugh at Sawney,
is a question. But there is little doubt that the English nation owes
much to Scotland. Her men of genius have oftener boasted a Scot-
tish or Irish origin than an English one. Her orators, her poets and
legislators, have been born oftener than otherwise among the people
she pretends to despise, or the people she is not too proud to oppress.
No one may say how much, at this very moment, England owes to
the canny Scot, and the warm-hearted son of Erin; the one of whom
she derides, and the other subdues. . . .
In due time, no doubt, we shall have the arts in some perfection.
Our architecture will improve as we have wealth and leisure to give
heed to the elegancies of life; but we trust that we shall always esti-
mate such matters as the Croton aqueduct as of far greater conse-
quence than statues and pictures; that before we have a national
gallery, we shall have asylums for the blind and the insane; and study
what is due to the wants of the whole people, before we undertake to
gratify the taste of foreigners, and the few travellers who, forming a
342 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
taste for certain luxuries abroad, would have us stop the gradual
progress we are making, to attend to some Quixotic scheme for making
America like "dear Italy." One man thinks music the great desidera-
tum, and would sacrifice every thing to that; another is mad upon
the subject of public edifices, and decries every ill-proportioned
building as a blot and stain upon the national character, forgetting
that our wealth is yet limited, and that we have a great deal to do in
other affairs, and that it is quite as important the debit side of the
account should bear a fair ratio to the credit side, as that a faultless
proportion should exist in the parts of the building. How many
public edifices have been enlarged to meet the exigency of the moment
and from economy, while taste demands that the whole be pulled
down and put up anew.
Go to the western immigrant, who consults convenience and expe-
dition in building his log hut, and is glad of any house that will shelter
his little family, and say to him, ''there friend, your house is out of all
proportion; and where are your fences and your flower-garden? Why
don't you paint your gateway, and make gravel walks about your
domicil, and set out shrubbery, &c., &c.?" The man will laugh in
your face, and perhaps answer you thus: ''I have a very warm bouse;
here is a hole in the roof to let out the smoke, and a hole in the door
to let in the pigs; it works very well, as you may see." This matter
of the pigs might be dispensed with, to be sure, but you would fine
out that the man is chiefly bent on living first; he feels that he has
great fundamental things to attend to before he can accommodate
himself to your tastes.
This is our position as a country. We have the land to clear,
canals to dig, rail-tracks to lay, water- works to finish; trade, agricul-
ture, and common school education, are the great interests' of our
people. You may talk to them, write about them, ridicule them, do
what you please to divert them from their common-sense track, and
you will talk, and write, and ridicule in vain. We cannot do every-
thing to-day. Give us time; and do not e.xpect from our infancy,
what only can be found in the manhood of a nation.
II. Advice to Emigrants
A. Foreign Immigration and the Westward Movement^ i8i6^
During the period when the Mississippi Valley was being rapidly populate!
many books on emigration were written, in which those abt)ul to migrate to .Vmerk
» Travels through the Untied Slates of America. By John Melish (Philadelphil
and I><jndon. iSi8), 628-33.
THE WESTWARD MOVEMENT 343
were encouraged to emigrate to the western country and advised as to routes and •
methods of travel. The same advice was equally good for the native Americans
along the coast, for the conditions in the western country were distinctive and
pecuHar to that section.
It would be very prudent for new comers, especially labourers or
farmers, to go into the country without delay, as they will save both
money and time by it, and avoid several inconveniences of a seaport
town. By spending some time with an American farmer, in any
capacity, they will learn the method of tillage, or working a planta-
tion, peculiar to this country. No time can be more usefully employed
than a year in this manner. In that space, any smart, stout man can
learn how woodland may be cleared, how cleared land is managed;
he will acquire some knowledge of crops and their succession, of usages
and customs that ought to be known, and perhaps save something
into the bargain. Many European emigrants who brought money
with them have heretofore taken this wise course, and found it greatly
to their advantage; for, at the end of the year, they knew what to
do with it. They had learned the value of lands in old settlements
and near the frontiers, the price of labour, cattle, and grain, and were
ready to begin the world with ardour and confidence. Multitudes of
poor people, from Ireland, Scotland, and Germany, have, by these
means, together with industry and frugality, become wealthy farmers,
or, as they are called in Europe, estated men, who, in their own coun-
tries, where all the lands are fully occupied, and the wages of labour low,
could never have emerged from the condition wherein they were born.
In the west of Pennsylvania, there is a custom which the farmers
there call cropping, and which is as beneficial to the owner as to the '
tiller of the ground, in the present state of this country. The cropper
performs the labour of the plantation, as spring and fall ploughings,
sowing, harrowing, or other work, and receives a certain share of the
crop, as agreed on, for his pains. But he must be an expert farmer
before he can undertake, or be intrusted with, the working of the farm.
None but a poor man undertakes it, and that only until he can save
money to buy land of his own.
It is invariably the practise of the American, and well suited to
his love of independence, to purchase a piece of land as soon as he can,
and to cultivate his own farm, rather than live at wages. It is equally
in the power of an emigrant to do the same, after a few years of labour
and economy. From that moment he secures all the means of happi-
ness. He has a sufficiency of fortune, without being exempt from
moderate labour; he feels the comfort of independence, and has no
344 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
fear of poverty in his old age. He is invested with the powers as well
as the rights of a freeman, and may in all cases, without let or appre^
hension, exercise them according to his judgment. He can afford to
his children a good education, and knows that he has thereby provided
for their wants. Prospects open to them far brighter than were his
own, and in seeing all this he is surely blest.
Industrious men need never lack employment in America. La-
bourers, carpenters, masons, bricklayers, stonecutters, blacksmiths,
turners, weavers, farmers, curriers, tailors, and shoemakers, and the
useful mechanics generally, are always sure of work and wages. Stone-
cutters now receive, in this city, (New York,) two dollars a day, equal
to nine shillings sterling; carpenters, one dollar and eighty-seven and
a half cents; bricklayers, two dollars; labourers, from one dollar to
one and a quarter; others in proportion. At this time (July, 1816,)
house-carpenters, bricklayers, masons, and stonecutters, are paid
three dollars per day in Petersburgh, Virginia. The town was totally
consumed by fire about a year since, but it is now rising from its ashes
in more elegance than ever. Mechanics will find ample employment
there for perhaps two years to come. . . .
Men of science, who can apply their knowledge to useful and prac-
tical purposes, may be very advantageously settled; but mere liter-
ary scholars, who have no profession, or only one which they cannot
profitably practise in this country, do not meet with much encour-
agement; in truth, with little or none, unless they are willing to devote
themselves to the education of youth. The demand for persons who
will do this is obviously increasing: and although many excellent pre-
ceptors are every where to be found among the native Americans^
there is still considerable room for competition on the part of wdl
qualified foreigners. . . .
In what part of this extensive country may an emigrant from
northern or western parts of Europe most advantageously settle?
he be undecided until his arrival, his choice will be agreeably per
plexed or suspended by the different invitations offered by varioi
sections of this empire. It covers an area between the 31st and 46tl
degrees of north latitude, and from the Atlantic ocean to the west
ward indefinitely. In time our settlements will reach the borders
the Pacific. The productions of the soil are as various as the climat
The middle states produce grain of all kinds; Maryland and Vir^
afford wheat and tobacco; North Carolina, naval stores; and Soi
Carolina and Georgia, rice, cotton, indigo, and tobacco: to the
products, Louisiana and Mississippi add sugar and indigo, which
THE WESTWARD MOVEMENT 345
now cultivated in Georgia likewise. Tennessee, Kentucky, Indiana
and Ohio are productive of the principal part of the foregoing staples,
together with hemp, coal, and such plants as are found in the northern
and middle states, to the eastward of the Allegany mountains. Over
this great tract, the finest fruits grow in perfection; grain of every
sort is in plenty; and ''he who puts a seed into the earth is recom-
pensed, perhaps, by receiving forty out of it." . . .
If a European has previously resolved to go to the western country,
near the Allegany or Ohio rivers, he will have saved much expense and
travel by landing at Baltimore; from thence to Pittsburg, at the head
of the Ohio, is about 200 miles direct; perhaps not more than 240 by
the course of the road. A few days' journey will bring him along a
fine turnpike from Baltimore, nearly to Cumberland, in Allegany
county, (Md.) from whence the public road, begun by the United
States, crosses the mountains, and is to touch the Ohio at Wheeling.
A smart fellow, in a little time, will reach Union, in Fayette county,
Pennsylvania. Here is a flourishing county adjoining Green, Wash-
ington, and Westmoreland, in any one of which may be found almost
every thing that is desirable, and a population hospitable and intelli-
gent. From Union to Pittsburg is but a day's journey. There one
may ascend the Allegany river to the upper countries; or he may
follow the current, and descend the Ohio to the state of that name,
cross it to Indiana, or. continue his voyage to Kentucky. He may
proceed to the Mississippi river, and go up to St. Louis, in the Missouri
Territory, or he may proceed a little farther up, and ascend the Illi-
nois River, in the Illinois Territory. Such are the facilities of going
by water from Pittsburg to various parts of the west; and those states
and territories named are among the most fertile in America.
From Philadelphia to Pittsburg is about 300 miles, chiefly through
a fine, plentiful, and well-cultivated country. A gentleman in Penn-
sylvania, of high standing and information, writes to a member of this
society: "Pennsylvania, after all, is, perhaps, the best field for Irish
capacity and habits to act in, with prospects for a family, or for indi-
vidual reward. Lands of the finest quality may be had in this state
for barely settling and remaining five years; the advantage derived
from the emigrant, being the encouragement of others to settle and
purchase." That is by the laws of Pennsylvania, warrantees must
make an actual settlement on the lands they claim to hold by deeds
from the land-office. Hence, trusty persons obtain a deed for a part,
on condition of clearing a certain quantity, and building a house and
residing there.
346 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
In our state, (of New York,) the advantages are great, whether we
regard soil or situation, or roads, lakes, and rivers. Few, if any states
in the Union, have finer land than the great western district of New
York. It has risen exceedingly in a few years, and the price will be
much increased as soon as the intended canal from lakes Erie and
Champlain to the Hudson river, shall be completed. These most use-
ful and magnificent works will probably be begun next summer, and
afford, for several years to come, to many thousands of industrious poor
men an opportunity of enriching themselves. If prudent, they may re-
alize their earnings on the spot, and become proprietors, in fee, of landed
estates in the beautiful country they shall have so greatly improved. . . .
Those who have acquired useful trades will, in general, find little
difficulty, either in our large cities, or the towns and villages all over
the country. There are vacancies for a large portion of them.
Clerks, shopkeepers, or attendants in stores, are seldom wanted;
their occupation is an uncertain one; it requires some time, too, for
such persons to acquire the mode of doing business with the same
expertness as natives or long residents. In most cases a sort of appren-
ticeship is to be served; and it would be well for persons newly arrived
to engage for some months at low wages, with a view to procure the
necessary experience. Six months or a year spent in this manner,
and for this purpose, will fit a man for making better use of his future
years; and he will have no occasion to repent his pains: we would
press this on your consideration. . . .
Those who have money, and intend to settle here in any line of
business, would do well to vest their funds in some public stock, or
deposit them in a bank, until they have acquired such a knowledge
of the country, the modes of life and business, as shall enable them to
launch into trade, commerce, or manufactures, with safety. To loan
money securely, needs great care. It has been often seen that persons
arriving in America with some property, lose it before they prosper in
the world. The reason of which is that, in the first place, they begin
some kind of business without knowing how to conduct it; and, in
the next, that, with less skill, they are less frugal and industrious than
their competitors. It is equally observable, that persons who arrive
here with little to depend on besides their personal exertions, become
prosperous at last; for by the time they have earned some money in
the employ of others, they will have learned there, likewise, how to
secure and improve it.
The delay here recommended is all important and necessary.
Nothing can he more ruinous to strangers in this country than head-
THE WESTWARD MOVEMENT 347
long haste in those plans and arrangements on which their future for-
tune entirely depends. Many a fatal shipwreck has been occasioned
by precipitation; and many are they who can from sad experience
bear witness to this truth. Knowledge of modes and methods must
be acquired before we think of hazarding, or dream of acquiring money.
A man ignorant of the use of the sword might as well fight a fencing
master with that weapon, as an unexperienced stranger enter the lists
in business with those who are adepts in their trade. But in giving
admonition, let us not be thought to present discouragements; a
little pains and observation will qualify a man of sense to judge, and
the example of men here, in this or that occupation, is well worth
regarding. The people of this country are cast in a happy medium,
at once liberal and cautious, cool in deciding, and ardent in performing;
none exceed them in acuteness and discernment, and their conduct is
generally a pattern that may be followed with advantage.
B. Opportunities in the West, iSiy ^
Naturally the force that drew emigrants westwards was the opportunity to be
found there. No one saw these opportunities more clearly than Morris Birkbeck,
a prosperous English farmer, who settled in Illinois in 181 7.
The great want of capital in this country is evinced by this circum-
stance: the growers of ''corn" (Indian corn) and other grain, sell at
this season regularly, under the knowledge that it will as regularly
advance to double the price before the next harvest. We now have
an offer of two hundred barrels of "corn," five bushels to the barrel,
at a dollar per barrel, when the seller is quite aware that it will be
worth two dollars per barrel at Midsummer. Thus store-keepers, or
other capitalists, receive as much for the crop, clear of expenses, as
the grower himself, who clears the land, ploughs, sows, and reaps it.
We may judge from this consideration how much the farmer is kept
back for want of spare capital; and what will be the advantages of the
settler who commands it. The same remark applies to bacon, and
every article of produce.
We must not suppose, that the poor farmer who is obliged to sell
under such a disadvantage, is absolutely poor. He is, on the contrary,
a thriving man. Probably, the person who now spares us from his
heap, two hundred barrels of corn, possessed three years ago, nothing
but his wife and family, his hands, and his title to a farm where an axe
^ iVo/e^ on a Journey in America from the Coast of Virginia to the Territory of
Illinois. By Morris Birkbeck (London, 1818), 141-4.
348 READINGS IN FXONOMIC HISTORY
had never been lifted. He now, in addition, has a cabin, a barn, stable,
horses, cows, and hogs; implements, furniture, grain, and other pro-
visions; thirty or forty acres of cleared land, and more in preparation,
and well fenced ; and his quarter section in its present state, worth four
times its cost. He is growing rich, but he would proceed at a double
speed, if he had the value of one year's crop beforehand: such is the
general condition of new settlers.
A good cow and calf is worth from twelve to twenty dollars; „
two year old heifer, six dollars; sheep are scarce; ewes are worth
about three dollars a head; a sow three dollars; a stout horse for
drawing, sixty dollars or upwards.
Wheat sells at 3 s. 4J d. sterling, per bushel, Winchester measure.
Oats, IS. 4d.
Indian corn, 1 1 d.
Hay, about 35 s. per ton.
Flour, per barrel, 36 s.: 196 lb. nett.
Fowls, 4jd. each.
Eggs, id.
Butter, 6d. per pound.
Cheese, rarely seen, 13 J d. per lb.
Meat, 2 d. per lb.
A buck, 4 s. 6 d. without the skin.
Salt, 3 s. 4d. per bushel.
Milk, given away.
Tobacco, 3 d. per pound.
Our design was to commence housekeeping, but, being near tl -
tavern, we continued to board there. This is more convenient to i
as there is but a poor market in this little town, and the tavern charj
are reasonable. Our board is two dollars per week, each person, i
which we receive twenty-one meals. Excellent coffee and tea, wi
broiled chickens, bacon, &c. for breakfast and supper; and varii i ^
of good but simple fare at dinner; about five-pence sterling a meal.
No liquor but water is thought of at meals in this country, besid-
coffee, tea, or milk.
Travelling expenses are very regular and moderate, amount!
to a dollar per day, for man and horse, — viz. —
Breakfast and feed for horse 37i cents
Feed for horses at noon . 12J "
Supper, and lodging, man and horse. 50 "
IOC that is
I dollar.
I
THE WESTWARD MOVEMENT 349
The power of capital in this newly settled or settling region, is not
thoroughly understood in the eastern states, or emigration would not
be confined to the indigent or laborious classes. These seem to be all
in motion ; for the tide sets far more strongly from these states toward
the west, than from all Europe together. Trade follows of course;
and it is not surprising that old America no longer affords a sure asylum
for the distressed of other countries.
C. Routes to the West, 1837 ^
Once the emigrant's mind was made up to move westward, the selection of a route
to that section became important. John Mason Peck, a well-known authority
on the history and geography of the Mississippi Valley, describes several routes as
follows :
Having decided to what State and part of the State, an emigrant
will remove, let him then conclude to take as little furniture and other
luggage as he can do with, especially if he comes by public convey-
ances. Those who reside within convenient distance of a sea port,
would find it both safe and economical to ship by New Orleans, in
boxes, such articles as are not wanted on the road, especially if they
steer for the navigable waters of the Mississippi. Bed and other
clothing, books, &c., packed in boxes, like merchants' goods, will go
much safer and cheaper by New Orleans, than by any of the inland
routes. I have received more than one hundred packages and boxes
from eastern ports, by that route, within twenty years, and never
lost one. Boxes should be marked to the owner or his agent at the
river port where destined, and to the charge of some forwarding house
in New Orleans. The freight and charges may be paid when the boxes
are received.
If a person designs to remove to the north part of Ohio and Indiana,
to Chicago and vicinity, or to Michigan, or Green Bay, his course
should be by the New York canal, and the lakes. . . .
The same route will carry emigrants to Cleaveland, and by the Ohio
canal, to Columbus, or to the Ohio river, at Portsmouth; from whence,
by steam-boat, direct communications will offer to any river port
in the Western States. From Buffalo, steam-boats run constantly
(when the lake is open), to Detroit, stopping at Erie, Ashtabula,
Cleaveland, Sandusky and many other ports, from whence stages
run to every prominent town. Transportation-wagons are employed
in forwarding goods. . . .
^ A New Guide for Emigrants to the West. By J. M. Peck (Boston, 1837), 372-5.
350 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
1
The most expeditious, pleasant and direct route for travelers to
the southern parts of Ohio and Indiana; to the Illinois river, as far
north as Peoria; to the Upper Mississippi, as far as Quincy, Rock
Island, Galena and Prairie du Chien; to Missouri, and to Kentucky,
Tennessee, Arkansas, Natchez and New Orleans, is one of the southern
routes. These are, — i. From Philadelphia to Pittsburgh, by rail-
roads and the Pennsylvania canal; 2. By the Baltimore and Ohio
rail-road and stages, to Wheeling; or, 3. For people living to the
south, of Washington, by stage, by the way of Charlottesville, (Vir-
ginia,) Staunton, the Hot, Warm, and White-Sulphur Springs, Lewis-
burg, Charlestown, to Guyandotte, from whence a regular line of
steam-boats runs three times a week to Cincinnati. Intermediate
routes from Washington city to Wheeling, or to Harper's Ferry, to
Fredericksburg, and intersect the route through Virginia, at Char-
lottesville.
D. Modes of Travelings 1818^
In addition to pointing out routes to the western country, Mr. Fearon gives
immigrants advice as to modes of traveling and to the kinds of equipment to be
provided as follows:
Mechanics, intending to continue as such, would do well to remain
in New York, Baltimore, or Philadelphia, until they become familiar-
ised with the country. Persons designing to settle in the western
States will save some expences by landing in Philadelphia. Those
to whom a few pounds is not an object, will shorten their voyage two
or three days by arriving at New York. The summer route from
thence to Philadelphia is particularly pleasant, with the exception of
25 miles land-carriage, and sleeping one night on the road: the whole
can be completed for about ten dollars. In winter, there are excellent
stages (by far the best in America) from New York to Philadelphia:
the fare is from eight to ten dollars, and the journey is "completed in
fourteen hours, — distance, 96 miles.
The route to the western country, by way of New Orleans, is
tended with many disadvantages: it is much longer, and more danj
ous, in consequence of a great deal of coasting, and the difficulties
the gulph of Florida. The voyage from the Balaize, at the junction
the Mississippi with the gulph of Mexico, to New Orleans, thou^
but 100 miles, is always tedious, and sometimes vessels are three weel
in getting up that distance. The yellow fever is of annual occurrcm
* Sketches of A nur'u It. I<\' Tff-r---*' l^rul^h.-iw I-'c-iron (f.oiuloii, 1 s
THE WESTWARD MOVEMENT
351
at New Orleans. The steam-boats, though numerous, do not proceed
at stated periods, and a residence at New Orleans may be long, and
must be expensive; and to engage a passage in a keel-boat up the stream,
would be an almost endless undertaking.
The best mode, in my judgment, is to proceed from Philadelphia
by way of Pittsburgh. Horseback is very preferable to the stage,
particularly on the Allegany mountains. A poor family would have
their baggage conveyed in the cheapest way by the regular stage-
waggons, — themselves walking; and this they will find in crossing
the mountains to be better than riding (except on horseback.) They
should take with them as good a stock of eatables as they can with con-
venience, the charges on the road being very extravagant. Those
who have their own waggons should have them made as strong as
possible, and their horses should be in good condition. Small articles
of cutlery, and all the machinery necessary for repairs on the road, are
of first necessity. When arrived at Pittsburgh, the cheapest and
easiest mode of travelling is to float down the river; for which purpose
there are boats of almost every variety, (steam-boats excepted,) from
2 s. 3 d. upwards, per hundred miles. Upon this mode of travelling I
do not enlarge: half an hour's residence in Pittsburgh will convey
more information than I could in twenty pages. Warm clothing
should be taken, as there is sure to be some severe weather in every part
of America. The articles required in floating down the river will be
nearly as follows: — The "Pittsburgh Navigator," a small volume,
and which may be had at Cramer and Spears; nails, hammer, hatchet,
tinder-box, box for fire, gridiron, iron pot, coffee-pot, coffee-mill,
tea-pot, plates, spoons, knives and forks, mugs, candles, coffee, tea,
sugar, spirits, meat, potatoes, bread, pens and ink, paper, medicine,
and a gun. If there is what is called "a good stage of water," that is,
if the waters of the Ohio are high, which they always are in the spring
and autumn, boats will be taken by the stream, without rowing, from
three to four miles per hour. Except in cases of dense fog, they can
be allowed to float at night in the Ohio. In the Mississippi this would
not be safe, the navigation of the latter river being both difficult and
dangerous. Unless the waters of the Ohio are very high at its falls
near Louisville, a pilot should be engaged to navigate the boat over
them.
352 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
III. Moving Westward
A. Down the Ohio River, 1820^
One of the most used routes to the western country was the Ohio River, for it
was an easy matter for the emigrant to buy or build a rude flatboat on whic ' '
carried his possessions to his new home in the west. James Hall, the best-k;
literary man of his time in the Mississippi Valley, describes one of these flatboais
as he saw it, as follows:
To-day we passed two large rafts lashed together, by which simple
conveyance several families from New England were transporting
themselves and their property to the land of promise in the western
woods. Each raft was eighty or ninety feet long, with a small house
erected on it; and on each was a stack of hay, round which several
horses and cows were feeding, while the paraphernalia of a farm-yard,:
the ploughs, waggons, pigs, children, and poultry, carelessly distrib-
uted, gave to the whole more the appearance of a permanent resi-
dence, than of a caravan of adventurers seeking a home. ... In this
manner these people travel at a slight expense. They bring their
own provisions; their raft floats with the current; and honest Jona-
than, surrounded with his scolding, grunting, squalling, and neighing
dependents, floats to the point proposed without leaving his own fire-
side; and on his arrival there, may step on shore with his house, anc
commence business, like a certain grave personage, who, on his mar-
riage with a rich widow, said he had "nothing to do but to walk ii
and hang up his hat."
B. Travel by Land, i8iy^
Mr. Birkbeck's impressions of the emigrants moving by wagon are as follows;
We have now fairly turned our backs on the old world, and fini
ourselves in the very stream of emigration. Old America seems to b
breaking up, and moving westward. We are seldom out of sight,
we travel on this grand track, towards the Ohio, of family groups
behind and before us, some with a view to a particular spot, close to
brother perhaps, or a friend, who has gone before, and reported we
of the country. Many like ourselves, when they arrive in the wildd
ness, will find no lodge prepared for them.
A small waggon (so light that you may almost carry ii, yet stron
enough to bear a good load of bedding, utensils and provisions, and
» UUersfrom the West, By The Hon. Judge [James] Hall (London, 1828), 87-
» Notes on a Journey in America, etc. By Morris Birkbcck (London, 1818), 31-.
I
THE WESTWARD MOVEMENT 353
swarm of young citizens, — and to sustain marvellous shocks in its
passage over these rocky heights) with two small horses; sometimes
a cow or two, comprises their all; excepting a little store of hard-
earned cash for the land ofhce of the district; where they may obtain
a title for as many acres as they possess half-dollars, being one fourth
of the purchase money. The waggon has a tilt, or cover, made of a
sheet, or perhaps a blanket. The family are seen before, behind, or
within the vehicle, according to the road or weather, or perhaps the
spirits of the party.
The New Englanders, they say, may be known by the cheerful
air of the women advancing in front of the vehicle ; the Jersey people
by their being fixed steadily within it; whilst the Pennsylvanians
creep lingering behind, as though regretting the homes they have left.
A cart and single horse frequently afford the means of transfer, some-
times a horse and pack-saddle. Often the back of the poor pilgrim
bears all his effects, and his wife follows, naked-footed, bending under
the hopes of the family.
C. Spirit of the Emigrant, 1820 ^
Emigrants from the thickly settled portions of the Atlantic seaboard no doubt
left their old homes for the west with a feeling of mingled joy and sorrow, — sorrow at
leaving friends and relatives behind, joy at the prospects in their new home.
No description can convey any adequate idea of the winding paths,
the steep acclivities, the overhanging cliffs, and dark ravines, with
which these Alpine regions abound — the sublime grandeur of the
scenery, or the difficulty and danger of the roads. At the time of
which I am speaking, the turnpikes, which have since rendered the
passes of the mountains so safe and easy, were not completed; and if
I found it toilsome in the extreme to accomplish my journey on horse-
back, you may conceive the almost insurmountable difficulties pre-
sented to weary-laden wanderers, encumbered with waggons and
baggage; yet I found these roads crowded with emigrants of every de-
scription, but the majority were of the poorest class. Here I would
meet a few lusty fellows, trudging it merrily along; and there a family,
more embarrassed, and less cheerful: now a gang of forty or fifty souls,
men, women, and children; and now a solitary pedestrian, with his
oaken staff, his bottle, and his knapsack; and, once a day, a stage-
1 Letters from the West. By The Hon. Judge [James] Hall (London, 1828),
310-14.
354 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
load of tired travellers, dragged heavily towards the west. Some-
times I beheld a gentleman toiling along with a broken-down vehicle,
and sometimes encountered the solitary horseman: here I espied the
wreck of a carriage, or the remains of a meal ; and there the temporary
shelter which had protected the benighted stranger. At one time,
beside a small stream rushing through a narrow glen, I encountered a
party of about fourscore persons, with two or three waggons. They
had halted to bait; the beasts were grazing among the rocks, the
men cleaving wood for fires, and boughs to erect a tenement for the
hour; the women cooking pr nursing their children, and the rosy boysc
and girls dabbling in a waterfall. When, from the summit of a moun-
tain, or one of its precipices, where the road wound beneath my feet,
appearing at intervals as far as the eye could reach, I beheld one of
these large caravans, composed of half-clad beings, of every age and
sex, slowly winding up the mountain path, or reclining at mid-day
among the rocks, I could compare them only to the gipsy bands,
described by foreign novelists.
At one of the most difficult passes of the mountain I met a caval-
cade, whose description will apply to a numerous class; they were
from New England. The senior of the party was a middle-aged man,
hale, well built, and decently clad. He was guiding a pair of small,
lean, active horses, harnessed to a light waggon, which contained the
bedding, and provisions of the party, and a few articles of household
furniture; two well-grown, barefoot boys, in home-spun shirts and
trowsers, held the tail of the waggon, laudably endeavouring to prevent
an upset, by throwing their weight occasionally to that side which
seemed to require ballast, while the father exerted his arms, voice, and
whip, in urging forward his ponies. In the rear toiled the partner oi
his pilgrimage, conducting, like John Rodgers' wife, "nine smaD
children and one at the breast," and exhibiting, in her own person and
those of her offspring, ample proof, that whatever might be the char-
acter of the land to which they were hastening, that which they hac
left was not deficient in health or fruitfulness. Nor must I omit tc
mention a chubby boy of six years old, who by sundry falls and immer-
sions, had acquired the hue of the soil from head to foot, and though
now trudging knee-deep in the mire, was craunching an apple witi
the most entire composure. They had reached the summit of thi
mountain just as I overtook them, and as they halted to rest, I check(
my horse to observe them. As they stretched their eyes forward o\
the interminable prospect, they were wrapped in silent wonder. A
far as th<* \'i^ion roiilfl <*\tend there was nothing to intercept it;
THE WESTWARD MOVEMENT 355
aeath our feet lay mountains, and vallies, and forests, and rivers, all
of which must be passed before these
"Sad unravellers
Of the mazes to the mountain's top,"
could reach the land of promise, which they imagined they could now
dimly discern in the distant horizon. They looked back with a kind
of shuddering triumph at what they had accomplished; they looked
forward with a trembling hope at what was to come. I thought I
could see in their faces regret, hope, fear, resignation — but they
spoke cheerfully, and expressed no dissatisfaction; and after answering
their inquiries as to their route onward, I left them. Tired souls!
they have, probably, long ere this, surmounted their fatigues, and
found a happy home in a land of plenty, where, surrounded with fat
pigs and fat children, they enjoy the only true otium cum dignitate;
while I, delving among the labyrinths of the law, find mazes more
intricate, and steeps more arduous, than the winding paths of the
mountain.
D. On the National Road, 1840^
The most important land route from the east to the west was the National
Road. This road was built by the National Government as far westward as Van-
dalia, Illinois. An English traveler, J. S. Buckingham, describes a scene on this
road as follows:
On the road we overtook and passed a great number of waggons,
perhaps 50, in the course of the day, containing emigrant families
going still further West — to Indiana and Illinois, where land may
still be had at one dollar and a quarter per acre. It is therefore
worth while for them to make long journeys, and hoard up their
resources, to put themselves in possession of an estate large enough
for the whole family, if they will only go far west enough to get it at
a cheap price. Of these emigrant families, there were often 12 or 15
persons in each, many of them very young children; a covered wag-
gon, drawn sometimes by two horses, though frequently by one only,
contained all the household furniture, and provisions for the way;
and the women and young children were piled upon these. The men
and the elder boys walked beside the wagon — and they made a jour-
ney of from J 2 to 15 miles a day. During the way they would halt
at any favourable spot that presented itself, unharness the horse,
^ Eastern and Western States of America. By J. S. Buckingham (London,
[1842]), II, 290-3.
356 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
and let it loose to graze in the woods, while the parents and childrec
would get their utensils for preparing a meal, or be engaged in washing,
drying, and mending their clothes by the wayside. . . .
Among the indications of this being the high road for emigrants
to the west, we saw several houses by the road-side, expressly for theii
use, with the signs '* Moovers' Accommodation," — others with more
correct orthography, had ''House for Movers," — and a third had the
rather ambiguous words, " Movers taken in here." At the same timCj
while the movers were going onward, settlers were clearing and plant-
ing all along the edge of the road. We saw perhaps loo log-cabins
in our day's ride, — some not a week old, and others in the act oi
putting up.
IV. Frontier Classes of Population
The Restlessness of the Frontiersman^ i8j^ ^
The westward movement was in reality a series of movements. Those wh-
went first performed their tasks and then made way for the next wave, which wa
in turn succeeded by the third. A careful observer has described this movemen
as follows:
The rough, sturdy habits of the backwoodsmen, living in tha
plenty which depends on God and nature, have laid the foundatio
of independent thought and feeling deep in the minds of wester
people.
Generally, in all the western settlements, three classes, like
waves of the ocean, have rolled one after the other. First, comes
pioneer, who depends for the subsistence of his family chiefly u]
the natural growth of vegetation, called the "range," and the proceec]
of hunting. His implements of agriculture are rude, chiefly of
own make, and his efforts directed mainly to a crop of corn, and
"truck patch." The last is a rude garden for growing cabbj
beans, corn for roasting ears, cucumbers and potatoes. A log cal
and, occasionally, a stable and corn-crib, and a field of a dozen aci
the timber girdled or "deadened," and fenced, are enough for his
pancy. It is quite immaterial whether he ever becomes the o\
of the soil. He is the occupant for the time being, pays no rent,
feels as independent as the "lord of the manor." With a hoi
cow, and one or two breeders of swine, he strikes into the w^
with his family, and becomes the founder of a new county, or
haps State. He builds his cabin, gathers around him a few o\
» A New Guide for Emigrants to the West. By J. M. Peck (Boston, 1837), i M
THE WESTWARD MOVEMENT 357
families of similar taste and habits, and occupies till the range is
somewhat subdued, and hunting a little precarious, or, which is more
frequently the case, till neighbors crowd around, roads, bridges and
fields annoy him, and he lacks elbow room. The preemption law
enables him to dispose of his cabin and corn-field, to the next class
of emigrants, and, to employ his own figures, he "breaks for the high
timber," "clears out for the New Purchase," or migrates to Arkansas,
I or Texas, to work the same process over.
The next class of emigrants purchase the lands, add field to field,
clear out the roads, throw rough bridges over the streams, put up
' hewn log houses, with glass windows, and brick or stone chimneys,
occasionally plant orchards, build mills, school-houses, court-houses,
&c., and exhibit the picture and forms of plain, frugal, civilized life.
Another wave rolls on. The men of capital and enterprise come-
The "settler" is ready to sell out, and take the advantage of the rise
of property, — push farther into the interior, and become himself, a
man of capital and enterprise in turn. The small village rises to a
spacious town or city; substantial edifices of brick, extensive fields,
orchards, gardens, colleges and churches are seen. Broadcloths,
silks, leghorns, crapes, and all the refinements, luxuries, elegancies,
frivolities and fashions, are in vogue. Thus wave after wave is
rolling westward: — the real el dorado is still farther on.
A portion of the two first classes remain stationary amidst the
general movement, improve their habits and condition, and rise in
the scale of society.
V. Activities of the Western Country
Manufactures and Agriculture, i8j2 ^
The differences in climate and soil of the western country gave the opportunity
there for a wide field of activities. By far the greater number of the people was
engaged in agriculture, but here and there manufactures on a small scale were
being put under way. Timothy Flint has described these activities as follows:
. . . Western Pennsylvania is a manufacturing region, and along
with Ohio, is the New England of the West. The people bring down
the Alleghany, clear and fine pine plank; delivering them along the
whole course of the Ohio, and sending great quantities even to New
Orleans. These pines, of which the houses in New Orleans are fin-
' ished, waved over the streams of New York, and are despatched in
^ The History mid Geography of the Mississippi Valley. By Timothy Flint
(Cincinnati, 1832), I, 147-50.
3s8 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
rafts and flat boats, after being sawed into plank, from Oleanne point.
From the Monongahela is sent the rye whiskey, which is so famous
in the lower country. On the Youghiogheny and Monongahela, at
Connelsville on the former, and Brownsville on the latter, are impor-
tant manufactories, chiefly of iron. Pittsburgh has been called the
Birmingham of America; though that honor, is keenly disputed by
her rival Cincinnati. There are numerous manufacturing towns in
Ohio, of which, after Cincinnati, Zanesville and Steubenville are the
chief. All this region, in numerous streams, calculated for water
power, in a salubrious climate, in abundance of pit coal, in its posi-
tion, and the genius and habits of its inhabitants, is naturally adapted
to become a manufacturing country. Materials for articles of primei
necessity, as salt, iron and glass, exist in the most ample abundance.
Pittsburgh, blackened with the smoke of pit coal, and one quarter
of Cincinnati, throwing up columns of smoke from the steam factories,
may be considered as great manufacturing establishments. If w<
except the cordage, bale rope, bagging, and other articles of hemper
fabric, manufactured in Kentucky, the chief part of the western manu-
factures originates in west Pennsylvania and Ohio. There are som«
indications, that Indiana will possess a manufacturing spirit; anc
there are separate, incipient establishments of this kind, more o;
less considerable, in every state, but Louisiana and Mississippi.
These manufactures consist of a great variety of articles of prim*
necessity, use and ornament. The principal are of iron, as casting:
of all sorts; and almost every article of ironmongery, that is manu
factured in the world. This manufacture is carried on to an immens
extent.
Glass is manufactured in various places, at present, it is supposed
nearly to an amount, to supply the country. Manufactures in woole
and cotton, in pottery, in laboratories, as white and red lead, Prus
sian blue, and the colors generally, the acids and other chemica
preparations, in steam power machinery, saddlery, wheel irons, wii
drawing, buttons, knitting needles, silver plating, Morocco leathei
articles in brass and copper, hats, boots and shoes, breweries, tin, an
other metals, cabinet work; in short, manufactures subservient t
the arts, and to domestic subsistence, are carried on at various place
in the western country with great spirit. Ohio has imbibed from hi
prototype, New England, manufacturing j)ropensities; and we ha^
heard it earnestly contested, that her capabilities for being a gra
manufacturing country, were even superior to those of New Englani
It is affirmed, that, taking the whole year into consideration, hi
THE WESTWARD MOVEMENT
359
climate is more favorable to health, and there can be no question,
that in her abundance of fuel, pit coal, and iron and the greater pro-
fusion of the raw material of manufactures in general, she has greatly
the advantage.
In the state of Kentucky, hemp is raised to a considerable extent;
and in its different manufactures constitutes a material article in
her exports. Salt is manufactured through all the western country
in sufficient abundance for home consumption. Shoes, hats and
clothing, to a considerable extent, are yet imported from abroad into
some of the western states. But as we have remarked, the far greater
part of the people are farmers. In west Pennsylvania and Virginia, in
Ohio and Kentucky, in Indiana, Illinois, Missouri, and a part of
Tennessee, the same articles are grown, and sent abroad, to wit,
flour, corn and the small grains; pulse, potatoes, and the other
vegetables; fruit, as apples, fresh and dried, dried peaches, and other
preserved fruits; beef, pork, cheese, butter, poultry, venison hams,
live cattle, hogs and horses. The greater part of the flour is sent
from Ohio and Kentucky; though Indiana, Illinois and Missouri are
following the example with great vigor. Wheat is grown with more
ease in Illinois and Missouri than in the other states. Ohio has gone
considerably into the culture of yellow tobacco. — Tobacco is one of
the staples of Kentucky export. Cattle, hogs and horses are sent to
New Orleans extensively from Illinois and Missouri, as are, also,
lead and peltries. In Arkansas, part of Tennessee, all Alabama and
Mississippi, cotton is the chief object of cultivation. Grains, and
other materials of nutriment, are only raised in subservience to
this culture. The cultivation of Louisiana, and a part of Florida, is
divided between cotton and sugar.
The cultivation in all the states, except Ohio, Indiana and Illinois
is chiefly performed by slaves, of whose character, habits and condition
we have yet to treat. The farms in Ohio and Indiana are generally
of moderate size, and the cultivators do not materially differ in their
habits from those of the northern Atlantic states. In Kentucky,
Illinois and Missouri, they are more addicted to what is called ' crop-
ping,' that is, devoting the chief attention to the cultivation of one
article. In all the states, save those, that cultivate cotton and sugar,
they make, on an average, sixty bushels of maize to the acre: and the
cultivation consists in ploughing two or three times between the rows,
during the growing of the crop. From eighty to an hundred bushels
are not an uncommon crop, and manuring is scarcely yet thought of
in cultivation. The good lands in Illinois and iii Missouri yield from
36o READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
twenty five to thirty bushels of wheat to the acre. The cultivation
is on prairie, or bottom land; and as the soil is friable, loose and per-
fectly free from stones, and on the prairies from every other obstruc-
tion, farming is not laborious and difficult, as in hard rough, and
rocky grounds. The ease and abundance, with which all the articles
of the country are produced, is one of the chief objects of complaint.
The necessary result is, that they are raised in such abundance, as
to glut the market at New Orleans, and used often not to bring enough
to pay the expenses of transportation. All this has been recently so
changed by the effects of our canals, the rapid influx of immigration,*
and the levelling tendency of the increased facilities of transport,
that the price of western produce is fast approximating the Atlantic
value. A natural result of this order of things will be, that the west
will soon export four times its former amount of flour, and other
produce.
From the cheapness of corn, and the abundance of 'mast,' as it
is called, in the woods, hogs, too, are easily multiplied, far beyond the
wants of the people. Pork is becoming one of the great staples of all
the western states, except those, that grow cotton and sugar. Cin-
cinnati is decidedly the largest pork market in the United States.
Prodigious numbers of swine are slaughtered there, and the business
of barrelling it, and curing bacon for exportation is one of the most
important sources of its trade. Cattle, and swine when carried to
New Orleans command a fair price. Horses are an important and
increasing article of export. Orchards north of 36° prosper, perhaps,
better than in any other country; and apples and cider are already
important articles of exportation, and will soon be more so; for no
where do apple trees grow with more rapidity and beauty, and sooner
and more amply load themselves with fruit. Venison and deer skins,
honey and beeswax are commonly received in the country stores,
in pay for goods. From Missouri, peltries, furs and lead, from the
Illinois mines, and from those in the Missouri mine region, are the
chief articles of present export.
VI. In the New Country
A. LoccUing and Building a Home, 18 j2 *
Once in his new home, the settler was compelled to adapt himself to his new
surroundings. He took the first means at hand to construct his house and bam.
In this work he was assisted by his neighbors, who rendered service to every
» The History atid Geography of the Mississippi Valley. By Timothy Flint
(Cincinnati. 1832), I, 184-7, 190-2.
THE WESTWARD MOVEMENT 361
new comer and expected similar service in turn. The homes varied according to
the locality and to the wealth of the owners, but in general they were of one type.
Timothy Flint had many opportunities of seeing the emigrant in his new home,
and describes his activities in making a home as follows:
The chances are still more favorable for the immigrants from Vir-
ginia, the two Carolinas and Georgia, who, from their habits and
relative position, still immigrate, after the ancient fashion, in the
southern wagon. This is a vehicle almost unknown at the north,
strong, comfortable, commodious, containing not only a movable
kitchen, but provisions and beds. Drawn by four or six horses, it
subserves all the various intentions of house, shelter and transport;
and is, in fact, the southern ship of the forests and prairies. The
horses, that convey the wagon, are large and powerful animals, followed
by servants, cattle, sheep, swine, dogs, the whole forming a primitive
caravan not unworthy of ancient days, and the plains of Mamre.
The procession moves on with power in its dust, putting to shame and
uncomfortable feelings of comparison the northern family with their
slight wagons, jaded horses and subdued, though jealous countenances.
Their vehicle stops; and they scan the strong southern hulk, with its
chimes of bells, its fat black drivers and its long train of concomitants,
until they have swept by.
Perhaps more than half the northern immigrants arrive at present
by way of the New York canal and lake Erie. If their destination be
the upper waters of the Wabash, they debark at Sandusky, and con-
tinue their route without approaching the Ohio. The greater number
make their way from the lake to the Ohio, either by the Erie and
Ohio, or the Dayton canal. From all points, except those west of the
Guyandot route and the national road, when they arrive at the
Ohio, or its navigable waters, the greater number of the families 'take
water.' Emigrants from Pennsylvania will henceforward reach the
Ohio on the great Pennsylvania canal, and will 'take water' at Pitts-
burgh. If bound to Indiana, Illinois or Missouri, they build, or pur-
chase a family boat. Many of these boats are comfortably fitted up,
and are neither inconvenient, nor unpleasant floating houses. Two
or three families sometimes fit up a large boat in partnership, purchase
an ' Ohio pilot,' a book that professes to instruct them in the mysteries
of navigating the Ohio; and if the Ohio be moderately high, and the
weather pleasant, this voyage, unattended with either difficulty or
danger, is ordinarily a trip of pleasure. We need hardly add, that a
great number of the wealthier emigrant families take passage in a
steam boat.
362 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
While the southerner finds the autumnal and. vernal season on tl
Ohio too cool, to the northerner it is temperate and delightful. When
the first wreaths of morning mist are rolled away from the stream by
the bright sun, disclosing the ancient woods, the hoary bluffs, and the
graceful curves and windings of the long line of channel above and
below, the rich alluvial belt and the fine orchards on its shores, the
descending voyagers must be destitute of the common perceptions of
the beautiful, if they do not enjoy the voyage, and find the Ohio, in
the French phrase. La belle riviere.
After the immigrants have arrived at Cincinnati, Lexington,
Nashville, St. Louis, or St. Charles, in the vicinity of the points,
where they had anticipated to fix themselves, a preliminary difficulty,
and one of difficult solution is, to determine to what quarter to repair.
All the towns swarm with speculating companies and land agents;
and the chance is, that the first inquiries for information in this per-
plexity will be addressed to them, or to persons who have a common
understanding and interest with them. The published information,
too, comes directly or indirectly from them, in furtherance of their
views. One advises to the Wabash, and points on the map to the
rich lands, fine mill seats, navigable streams and growing towns in
their vicinity. Another presents a still more alluring picture of the
lands in some part of Illinois, Missouri, the region west of the lakes,
and the lead mines. Another tempts him with White River, Arkan-
sas, Red River, Opelousas, and Attakapas, the rich crops of cotton
and sugar, and the escape from winter, which they offer. Still another
company has its nets set in all the points, where immigrants congre-
gate, blazoning all the advantages of Texas, and the Mexican country.
In Cincinnati, more than in any other town, there are generally pre-
cursors from all points of the compass, to select lands for companies,
that are to follow. There are such here at present both from Euroju-
and New England; and we read advertisements, that a thousand
pyersons are shortly to meet at St. Louis to form a company to cross
the Rocky Mountains, with a view to select settlements on the
Oregon.
When this slow and perplexing process of balancing, comparing'
and fluctuating between the choice of rivers, districts, climates ami
advantages, is fixed, after determination has vibrated backwards ami
forwards according to the persuasion and eloquence of the last advist >
until the puq^ose of the immigrant is fixed, the northern settler
generally borne to the point of debarkation, nearest his selected sp«
by water. He thence hires the transport of his family and movabi*
THE WESTWARD MOVEMENT 363
to the spot; though not a few northern emigrants move all the distance
in wagons. The whole number from the north far exceeds that from
the south. But they drop, in noiseless quietness, into their position,
and the rapidity of their progress in settling a country is only pre-
sented by the startling results of the census.
The southern settlers who immigrate to Missouri and the country
south west of the Mississippi, by their show of wagons, flocks and
numbers create observation, and are counted quite as numerous, as
they are. Ten wagons are often seen in company. It is a fair allow-
ance, that a hundred cattle, beside swine, horses and sheep, and six
negroes accompany each. The train, with the tinkling of an hundred
bells, and the negroes, wearing the delighted expression of a holiday
suspension from labor in their countenances, forming one group, and
the family slowly moving forward, forming another, as the whole is
seen advancing along the plains, it presents a pleasing and picturesque
spectacle.
They make arrangements at night fall to halt at a spring, where
there is wood and water, and a green sward for encampment. The
dogs raise their accustomed domestic baying. The teams are un-
harnessed, and the cattle and horses turned loose into the grass. The
blacks are busy in spreading the cheerful table in the wilderness, and
preparing the supper, to which the appetite of fatigue gives zest. They
talk over the incidents of the past day, and anticipate those of the
morrow. If wolves and owls are heard in the distance, these desert
sounds serve to render the contrast of their society and security more
sensible. In this order they plunge deeper and deeper into the forest
or prairie, until they have found the place of their rest.
The position for a cabin generally selected by the western settlers
is a gentle eminence near a spring, or what is called a branch, central
to a spacious tract of fertile land. Such spots are generally occupied
by tulip and black walnut trees, intermixed with the beautiful cornus
florida and red biid, the most striking flowering shrubs of the western
forest.
Springs burst forth in the intervals between the high and low
grounds. The brilliant red bird seen flitting among the shrubs, or
perched on a tree, in its mellow whistle seems welcoming the immigrant
to his new abode. Flocks of paroquets are glittering among the trees,
and gray squirrels are skipping from branch to branch. The chanti-
cleer rings his echoing note among the woods, and the domestic sounds
and the baying of the dogs produce a strange cheerfulness, as heard
in the midst of trees, where no habitation is seen. Pleasing reflections
364 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
and happy associations are naturally connected with the contempla-
tion of these beginnings of social toil in the wilderness.
In the midst of these solitary and primeval scenes the patient and
laborious father fixes his family. In a few days a comfortable cabin
and other out buildings are erected. The first year gives a plentiful
crop of corn, and common and sweet potatoes, melons, squashes, tur-
nips and other garden vegetables. The next year a field of wheat is
added, and lines of thrifty apple trees show among the deadened trees.
If the immigrant possess any touch of horticultural taste, the finer
kinds of pear, plum, cherry, peach, nectarine and apricot trees are
found in the garden. In ten years the log buildings will all have disap-
peared, the shrub and forest trees will be gone. The arcadian aspect
of humble and retired abundance and comfort will have given place
to a brick house, or a planted frame house, with fences and out build-
ings very like those, that surround abodes in the olden countries. . . .
The first business is to clear away the trees from the spot where;
the house is to stand. The general construction of a west country
cabin is after the following fashion. Straight trees are felled of a
size, that a common team can draw, or as the phrase is * snake,' them
to the intended spot. The common form of a larger cabin is that,
called a 'double cabin;' that is, two square pens with an open space
between, connected by a roof above and a floor below, so as to form a
parallelogram of nearly triple the length of its depth. In the open
space the family take their meals during the pleasant weather; and
it serves the threefold purpose of kitchen, lumber room, and dining
room. The logs, of which it is composed, are notched on to one
another, in the form of a square. The roof is covered with thin splits
of oak, not unlike staves. Sometimes they are made of ash, and in
the lower country of cypress, and they are called clap boards. Instead
of being nailed, they are generally confined in their place by heavj
timbers, laid at right angles across them. This gives the roof of a loj
house an unique and shaggy appearance. But if the clap boards hav<
been carefully prepared from good timber they form a roof sufficientl)
impervious to common rains. The floors are made from short anc
thick plank, split from yellow ^poplar, cotton wood, black walnut, am
sometimes oak. They are confined with wooden pins, and are tech
nically called 'puncheons.'
The southern people, and generally the more wealthy immigrant
advance in the first instance to the luxury of having the logs hew<
on the inside, and the i)uncheon floor hewed, and planed, in which
it becomes :i \'('ry comfortable and neat floor. Tht* next step is t
THE WESTWARD MOVEMENT 365
build the chimney, which is constructed after the French, or American
fashion. The French mode is a smaller quadrangular chimney, laid
up with smaller splits. The American fashion is to make a much larger
aperture, laid up with splits of great size and weight. In both forms
it tapers upwards, Uke a pyramid. The interstices are filled with a
thick coating of clay, and the outside plastered with clay mortar,
prepared with chopped straw, or hay, and in the lower country with
long moss. The hearth is made with clay mortar, or, where it can be
found, sand stones, as the common lime stone does not stand the fire.
The interstices of the logs in the room are first ' chincked ;' that is to
say, small blocks and pieces of wood- in regular forms are driven
between the intervals, made by laying the logs over each other, so as
to form a kind of a coarse lathing to hold the mortar.
The doors are made of plank, split in the manner mentioned before,
from fresh cut timber; and they are hung after an ingenious fashion
on large wooden hinges, and fastened with a substantial wooden latch.
The windows are square apertures, cut through the logs, and are
closed during the cooler nights and the inclement weather by wooden
shutters. The kitchen and the negro quarters, if the establishment
have slaves, are separate buildings, prepared after the same fashion;
but with less care, except in the article of the closeness of their roofs.
The grange, stable and corn houses are all of similar materials, varied
in their construction to answer their appropriate purposes. About
ten buildings of this sort make up the establishment of a farmer with
three or four free hands, or half a dozen slaves.
The field, in which the cabin is built, is generally a square or oblong
enclosure, of which the buildings are the centre, if the owner be from
the south; or in the centre of one side of the square, if from the north.
If the soil be not alluvial, a table area of rich upland, indicated to be
such by its peculiar growth of timber, is selected for the spot. Nine
tenths of the habitations in the upper western states are placed near
springs, which supply the family with water. The settlers on the
prairies, for the most part, fix their habitations in the edges of the wood,
that skirts the prairie, and generally obtain their water from wells.
The inhabitants of the lower country, on the contrary, except in the
state of Mississippi, where springs are common, chiefly supply them-
selves with water from cisterns filled by rain. If the settlers have
slaves, the trees are carefully cleared away, by cutting them down near
the ground. That part of the timber, which cannot be used either
for rails, or the construction of the buildings, is burned, and a clearing
is thus made for a considerable space round the cabin. In the remain-
366 READINGS IN ECONOMIC mSTORY
ing portion of the field, the trees undergo an operation, called by the
northern people ' girdling,' and by the southern * deadening.' That is,
a circle is cut, two or three feet from the ground, quite through the bark
of the tree, so as completely to divide the vessels, which carry on the
progress of circulation. Some species of trees are so tenacious of life,
as to throw out leaves, after having suffered this operation. But they
seldom have foliage, after the first year. The smaller trees are all cut
down; and the accumulated spoils of vegetable decay are burned
together; and the ashes contribute to the great fertility of the virgin
soil. If the field contain timber for rails, the object is to cut as much
as possible on the clearing; thus advancing the double purpose of
clearing away the trees, and preparing the rails, so as to require the
least possible distance of removal. An experienced hand will split
from an hundred to an hundred and fifty rails in a day. Such is the
convenience of finding them on the ground to be fenced, that Ken-
tucky planters and the southern people generally prefer timbered land
to prairie; notwithstanding the circumstance, so unsightly and incon-
venient to a northern man, of dead trees, stumps, and roots, which,
strewed in every direction over his field, even the southern planter
finds a great preliminary impediment in the way of cultivation. The
northern people prefer to settle on the prairie land, where it can be
had in convenient positions.
The rails are laid zigzag, one length running nearly at right angles
to the other. This in west country phrase, is ' worm fence,' and in the
northern dialect ' Virginia fence.' The rails are large and heavy, and
to turn the wild cattle and horses of the country, require to be laid tin
rails or six feet in height. The smaller roots and the underbrush
cleared from the ground by a sharp hoe, known by the name 'griibl
hoe.' This implement, with a cross cut saw, a whip saw, a hand .n
axes, a broad axe, an adze, an augur, a hammer, nails, and an iron t
to split clap boards, constitute the indispensable apparatus for a ba
woodsman. The smoke house, spring house, and other comn
appendages of such an establishment, it is unnecessary to descrila .
for they are the same as in the establishment of the farmers in tlu
middle and southern Atlantic states.
B. Efect of the New Home on the Character 0} the Emigrant, iS
While the frontier offered undreamed of advantases to the settler, it at
same time tested his courage by imposing on him hardships unknown in
old home. To secure the one it was necessary to undergo the other. Moret'
» The History and Geography of the Mississippi Valley. By Timothy I lint
(Cincinnati, 183a), I, 187-90.
THE WESTWARD MOVEMENT 367
as each settler recalled the excellencies of his old associations, and compared them
with a feeling of regret to the limitations of the frontier he experienced a home
sickness which too often forced him back to his old home in the east, thus rob-
bing him of the opportunities that lay all around him.
It is a wise arrangement of providence, that different minds are
endowed with different tastes and predilections, that lead some to
choose the town, others manufactures, and the village callings. It
seems to us that no condition, in itself considered, promises more
comfort, and tends more to virtue and independence, than that of
these western yeomen, with their numerous, healthy and happy chil-
dren about them; with the ample abundance of their granaries; their
habitation surrounded by orchards, the branches of which must be
propped to sustain their fruit, beside their beautiful streams and cool
beach woods, and the prospect of settling each of their children on
similar farms directly around them. Their manners may have some-
thing of the roughness imparted by living in solitude among the trees;
but it is kindly, hospitable, frank, and associated with the traits, that
constitute the stability of our republic. We apprehend, such farmers
would hardly be willing to exchange this plenty, and this range of their
simple domains, their well filled granaries, and their droves of domestic
animals for any mode of life, that a town can offer.
No order of things presents so palpable a view of the onward march
of American institutions as this. The greater portion of these immi-
grants, beside their wives, a few benches and chairs, a bible and a gun,
commenced with little more than their hands. Their education for
the most part, extended no farther than reading and writing, and their
aspirations had never strayed beyond the desire of making a farm.
But a sense of relative consequence is fostered by their growing posses-
sions, and by perceiving towns, counties, offices and candidates spring-
ing up around them. One becomes a justice of peace, another a county
judge and another a member of the legislative assembly. Each one
assumes some municipal function, pertaining to schools, the settle-
ment of a minister, the making of roads, bridges, and public works.
A sense of responsibility to public opinion, self respect, and a due
estimation of character and correct deportment are the consequences.
This pleasant view of the commencement and progress of an immi-
grant is the external one. Unhappily there is another point of view,
from which we may learn something what has been passing in his
mind, during this physical onward progress.
All the members of the establishment have been a hundred times
afflicted with that gloomy train of feeling, for which we have no better
368 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
name, than home sickness. All the vivid perceptions of enjoyment
of the forsaken place are keenly remembered, the sorrows overlooked,
or forgotten. The distant birth place, the remembrance of years,
that are gone, returning to memory amidst the actual struggles of
forming a new establishment, an effort full of severe labor, living in a
new world, making acquaintance with a new nature, competing with
strangers, always seeming to uneducated people, as they did to the
ancients, as enemies, these contrasts of the present with the mellowed
visions of memory all tend to bitterness. We never understand, h<
many invisible ties of habit we sever in leaving our country, until we
find ourselves in a strange land. The old pursuits, and ways of passing
time, of which we took little note, as they passed, where there are
new forms of society, new institutions, new ways of managing every
thing, that belongs to the social edifice, in a word, a complete change
of the whole circle of associations feelings and habits, come over the
mind, like a cloud.
The immigrant, in the pride of his remembrances, begins to extol
the country, he has left, its inhabitants, laws, institutions. The
listener has an equal stock of opposite prejudices. The pride of the
one wounds the pride of the other. The weakness of human nature
is never more obvious, than in these meetings of neighbors in a new
country, each fierce and loud in extolling his own country, and detract-
ing from all others in the comparison. These narrow and vile preju-
dices spread from family to family, and create little clans political,
social, religious, hating, and hated. No generous project for a school,
church, library, or public institution, on a broad and equal scale, can
prosper, amidst such an order of things. It is a sufficient reason,
that one clan proposes it, for another to oppose it. All this springs
from one of the deepest instincts of our nature, a love of country, which,
like a transplanted tree, in removing has too many fibres broken off,
to flourish at once in a new soil. The immigrant meets with sickness,
misfortune, disaster. There are peculiar strings in the constitution
of human nature, which incline him to repine, and imagine, that the
same things would not have befallen him in his former abode. He
even finds the vegetables, fruits, and meats, though apparently finer,
less savory and nutritive, than those of the old country. Under the
pressure of such illusions, many an immigrant has forsaken his cabin,
returned to his parent country, found this mockery of his fancies play-
ing at cross purposes with him, and showing him an abandoned para-
dise in the western woods, and father land the country of penury and
disaster. A second removal, perhaps, instructs him, that most of th<
THE WESTWARD MOVEMENT 369
causes of our dissatisfaction and disgust, that we imagine have their
origin in external things, really exist in the mind.
* -To the emigrants from towns and villages in the Atlantic country,
though they may have thought little of religious institutions at home,
the absence of the church with its spire, and its sounds of the church-
goitig bell, of the village bustle, and the prating of the village tavern
are felt, as serious privations. The religious discourses so boisterous
and vehement, and in a tone and phrase so different from the calm
tenor of what he used to hear, at first produce a painful revulsion not
wholly unmixed with disgust. He finds no longer those little circles
of company, into which he used to drop, to relax a leisure hour,
which, it maybe, were not much prized in the enjoyment; but are
now felt, as a serious want. Nothing- shocks him so much, as to see
his neighbor sicken, and die, unsolaced By the voice of religious
instruction and prayer, and carried to his long home without funeral
services. These are some of the circumstances, that, in the new
settlements, call up the tender recollections of a forsaken home to
embitter the present.
VII. Stages of Settlement
The Frontier Line, i8jo, 1840, i8jo, 1860^
The extent of the westward movement may be measured with approximate
exactness by comparing the position of the frontier line from decade to decade.
1830
In the decade from 1820 to 1830 other territorial changes have
occurred. In the early part of the decade the final transfer of Florida
from Spanish jurisdiction was effected, and it became a territory of the
United States. Missouri has been carved from the southeastern part
of the old Missouri territory, and admitted as a state. Otherwise the
states and territories have remained nearly as before. Settlement
during the decade has again spread greatly. The westward extension
of the frontier does not appear to have been so great as in some former
periods, the energies of the people being mainly given to filling up the
included areas. In other words, the decade from 18 10 to 1820 seems
to have been one rather of blocking out work which the succeeding
decade has been largely occupied in completing.
During this period the Indians, especially in the south, have still ■
^ Tenth Census. Volume on Population (Washington, 1883), pp. xvi-xviii.
370 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
delayed settlement to a great extent. The Creeks and the Cherokees
in Georgia and Alabama, and the Choctaws and the Chickasaws in
Mississippi, occupy large areas of the best portions of those states,
and successfully resist encroachment upon their territory. Georgia,
however, has witnessed a large increase in settlement during the
decade. The settlements which have heretofore been staid on the line
of the Altamaha spread westward across the central portion of the state
to its western boundary, where they have struck against the barrier of
the Creek territory. Stopped at this point, they have moved south-
ward down into the southwest corner, and over into Florida, extending
even to the Gulf coast. Westward they have stretched across the
southern part of Alabama, and joined that body of settlement which
was previously formed in the drainage-basin of the Mobile river. The
Louisiana settlements have but slightly increased, and no great change
appears to have taken place in Mississippi, owing largely to the cause
above noted, viz., the occupancy of the soil by Indians. In Arkansas
the spread of settlement has been in a strange and fragmentary way.
A line reaches from Louisiana up the Arkansas river to the state line,
where it is stopped abruptly by the boundary of the Indian territory.
It extends up the Mississippi, and joins the great body of population
in Tennessee. A branch extends northeastward from near Little
Rock to the northern portion of the state. All these settlements within
Arkansas territory are as yet very sparse. In Missouri the principal
extension of settlement has been in a broad belt up the Missouri river,
reaching to the present site of Kansas City, at the mouth of the Kansas
river, where quite a dense body of population appears. Settlement
has progressed in Illinois, from the Mississippi river eastward and
northward, covering more than half the state. In Indiana it has fol-
lowed up the Wabash river, and thence has spread until it reaches
nearly to the north line of the state. But little of Ohio remains unset-
tled. The sparse settlements about Detroit, in Michigan territory
have broadened out, extending into the interior of the state, while
isolated patches have appeared in various other localities.
Turning to the more densely settled parts of the country, we fine
that settlement is slowly making its way northward in Maine, althougl
discouraged by the poverty of the soil and the severity of the climate
The unsettled tract in northern New York is decreasing, but vef}
slowly, as is also the case with the unsettled area in northern Penn-
sylvania. In western Virginia the unsettled tracts are reduced t(
almost nothing, while the vacant region in eastern Tennessee, on thi
Cumberland plateau, is rapidly diminishing.
THE WESTWARD MOVEMENT 371
At this date, 1830, the frontier line has a length of 5,300 miles, and
the aggregate area now embraced between the ocean, the Gulf, and the
frontier Hne is 725,406 square miles. Of this, however, not less than
97,389 square miles are comprised within the included vacant tracts,
leaving only 628,017 square miles as the settled area within the frontier
line, all of which lies between latitude 29° 15' and 46° 15' north, and
between longitude 67° and 95° west.
Outside the body of continuous settlement are no longer found
large groups, but several small patches of population appear in Ohio,
Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, and Wisconsin, aggregating 4,700 square
miles, making a total settled area, in 1830, of 632,717 square miles.
As the aggregate population is 12,866,020, the average density of settle-
ment is 20.3 to the square mile.
1840
During the decade ending in 1840 the state of Michigan has been
created with its present limits, the remainder of the old territory being
known as Wisconsin territory. Iowa territory has been created from
a portion of Missouri territory, embracing the present state of Iowa
and the western part of Minnesota, and Arkansas has been admitted
to the Union.
In 1840 we find, by examining the map of population, that the
process of filling up and completing the work blocked out between 18 10
and 1820 has been carried still further. From Georgia, Alabama, and
Mississippi the Cherokee, Creek, Choctaw, and Chickasaw Indians,
who, at the time of the previous census, occupied large areas in these
states, and formed a very serious obstacle to settlement, have been
removed to the Indian territory, and their country has been
opened up to settlement. Within the two or three years which
have elapsed since the removal of these Indians the lands
relinquished by them have been entirely taken up, and the
country has been covered with a comparatively dense settlement.
In northern Illinois, the Sac and Fox and Pottawatomie tribes having
been removed to the Indian territory, their country has been promptly
taken up, and we find now settlements carried over the whole extent
of Indiana, Illinois, and across Michigan and Wisconsin as far north
as the 43d parallel. Population has crossed the Mississippi river into
Iowa territory, and occupies a broad belt up and down that stream.
In Missouri the settlements have spread northward from the Missouri
river nearly to the boundary of the state, and southward till they cover
most of the southern portion, and make connection in two places with
372 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
the settlements of Arkansas. The unsettled area found in southern
Missouri, together with that in northwestern Arkansas, is due to the
hilly and rugged nature of the country, and to the poverty of the soil,
as compared with the rich prairie lands all around. In Arkansas the
settlements remain sparse, and have spread widely away from the
streams, covering much of the prairie parts of the state. There is,
beside the area in northwestern Arkansas just mentioned, a large area
in the northeastern part of the state, comprised almost entirely within
the alluvial regions of the St. Francis river, and also one in the southern
portion, extending over into northern Louisiana, which is entirely in
the fertile prairie section. The fourth unsettled region lies in the
southwest part of the state.
In the older states we note a gradual decrease in the unsettled
areas, as in Maine and in New York. In northern Pennsylvania the
unsettled section has entirely disappeared. A small portion of the
unsettled patch on the Cumberland plateau still remains. In southern
Georgia the Okeefenokee swamp and the pine barrens adjacent have
thus far repelled settlement, although population has increased in
Florida, passing entirely around this area to the south. The greater
part of Florida, however, including nearly all the peninsula and several
large areas along the Gulf coast, still remains without settlement.
This is doubtless due, in part to the nature of the country, being
alternately swamp and hummock, and in part to the hostility of the
Seminole Indians, who still occupy nearly all of the peninsula.
The frontier line in 1840 has a length of 3,300 miles. This shrink-
ing in its length is due to its rectification on the northwest and south-
west, owing to the filling out of the entire interior. It incloses an area
of 900,658 square miles, all lying between latitude 29° and 46° 30'
north, and longitude 67° and 95° 30' west. The vacant tracts have,
as noted above, decreased, although they are still quite considerable
in Missouri and Arkansas. The total area of the vacant tracts is
95,516 square miles. The settled area outside the frontier line is
notably small, and amounts, in the aggregate, to only 2,150 miles,
making the entire settled area 807,292 square miles in 1840. The
aggregate population being 17,069,453, the average density is 21.1 tc
the square mile.
1850
Between 1840 and 1850 the limits of our country have been furthei
extended by the annexation of the state of Texas and of territory
acquired from Mexico by the treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo. The state
of Iowa, Wi'^ronsin, anH Florida havelu'cn admitted to \hc Union, an<
THE WESTWARD MOVEMENT 373
the territories of Minnesota, Oregon, and New Mexico have been
created. An examination of the maps shows that the frontier line ^
has changed very little during this decade. At the western border of
Arkansas the extension of settlement is peremptorily limited by the
boundary of the Indian territory; but, curiously enough also, the west-
ern boundary of Missouri puts almost a complete stop to all settlement,
notwithstanding that some of the most densely populated portions
of the state lie directly on that boundary.
In Iowa settlements have made some advance, moving up the
Missouri, the Des Moines, and other rivers. The settlements in Min-
nesota at and about St. Paul, which appeared in 1840, are greatly
extended up and down the Mississippi river, while other scattering
bodies of population appear in northern Wisconsin. In the southern
part of the state settlement has made considerable advance, especially
in a northeastern direction, toward Green bay. In Michigan the
change has been very slight.
Turning to the southwest we find Texas, for the first time on the -
map of the United States, with a considerable extent of settlement;
in general, however, it is very sparse, most of it lying in the eastern
part of the state, and being largely dependent upon the grazing industry.
The included unsettled areas now are very small and few in num- -
ber. There still remains one in southern Missouri, in the hilly country ;
a small one in northeastern Arkansas, in the swampy and alluvial
region; and one in the similar country in the Yazoo bottom-lands.
Along the coast of Florida are found two patches of considerable size,
which are confined to the swampy coast regions. The same is the
case along the coast of Louisiana. The sparse settlements of Texas
are also interspersed with several patches devoid of settlement. In
southern Georgia the large vacant space heretofore noted, extending
also into northern Florida, has entirely disappeared, and the Florida
settlements have already reached southward to a considerable dis-
tance in the peninsula, being now free to extend without fear of hostile
Seminoles, the greater part of whom have been removed to the Indian
territory.
The frontier line, which now extends around a considerable part of
Texas and issues on the Gulf coast at the mouth of the Nueces river,
is 4,500 miles in length. The aggregate area included by it is 1,005,213
square miles, from which deduction is to be made for vacant spaces,
in all, 64,339 square miles. The isolated settlements lying outside
this body in the western part of the country amount to 4,775 square
miles.
374 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
But it is no longer by a line drawn around from the St. CroLx river
to the Gulf of Mexico that we embrace all the population of the United
States, excepting only a few outlying posts and small settlements.
We may now, from the Pacific, run a line around 80,000 miners and
adventurers, the pioneers of more than one state of the Union soon to
arise on that coast. This body of settlement has been formed, in the
main, since the acquisition of the territory by the United States, an^'
it might even be said, within the last year (1849- '50), dating from 1
discovery of gold in California. These settlements may be computed
rudely at 33,600 square miles, making a total area of settlement at
that date of 979,249 square miles, the aggregate population being
23,191,876, and the average density of settlement 23.7 to the square
mile.
i860
Between 1850 and i860 the territorial changes noted are as follows:
The strip of Arizona and New Mexico south of the Gila river has been
acquired from Mexico by the Gadsden purchase (1853); Minnesota
territory has been admitted as a state; Kansas and Nebraska terri-
tories have been formed from parts of Missouri territory; California
and Oregon have been admitted as states, while, in the unsettled parts
of the Cordilleran region, two new territories (Utah and Washington)
have been formed out of parts of that terra incognita which we bought
from France as a part of Louisiana, and of that which we acquired by
conquest from Mexico. At this date we note the first extension of
settlements beyond the line of the Missouri river. The march of
settlement up the slope of the great plains has begun. In Kansas
and Nebraska population is now found beyond the 97th meridian.
Texas has filled up even more rapidly, its extreme settlements reach-
ing to the looth meridian, while the gaps noted at the date of the last
census have all been filled by population. The incipient settlements
about St. Paul, in Minnesota, have grown like Jonah's gourd, spread-
ing in all directions, and forming a broad band of union with the main
body of settlement down the line of the Mississippi river. In Iowa
settlements have crept steadily northwestward along the course of the
drainage, until the state is nearly covered. Following up the Missouri,
population has reached out into the southeastern corner of the present
area of Dakota. In Wisconsin the settlements have moved at least
one degree farther north, while in the lower peninsula of Michigan
they have spread up the lake shores, nearly encircling it on the side
next lake Michigan. On the upper peninsula the little settlements
which appeared in 1850 in the copper region on Keeweenaw point
THE WESTWARD MOVEMENT 375
have extended and increased greatly in density as that mining interest
has developed in value. In northern New York there is, apparently,
no change in the unsettled area. In northern Maine we note, for the
first time, a decided movement toward the settlement of its unoccupied
territory, in the extension of the settlements on its eastern and north-
ern border up the St. John river. The unsettled regions in southern
Missouri, northeastern Arkansas, and northwestern Mississippi have
liecome sparsely covered by population. Along the Gulf coast there
is little or no change. There is to be noted a slight extension of settle-
ment southward in the peninsula of Florida.
The frontier line now measures 5,300 miles, and embraces 1,126,518
square miles, lying between latitude 28° 30' and 47° 30' north, and
between longitude 67° and 99° 30' west. From this deduction should
be made on account of vacant spaces, amounting to 39,139 square
miles, found mainly in New York and along the Gulf coast. The out-
lying settlements beyond the looth meridian are now numerous.
They include, among others, a strip extending far up the Rio Grande
in Texas, embracing 7,475 square miles (a region given over to the
raising of sheep), while the Pacific settlements, now comprising one
sovereign state, are nearly three times as extensive as at 1850, embrac-
ing 99,900 square miles. The total area of settlement in i860 is thus
1,194,754 square miles; the aggregate population is now 31,443,321,
and the average density of settlement 26.3 to the square mile.
'-^1
L
CHAPTER XII
INLAND COMMERCE AND INTERNAL IMPROVEMENTS,
1816-1860
I. Stagecoach Travel
A. Traveling by Stagecoach in Virginia, 18 j^ *
Because of the generally bad state of the roads and of the incompetence of
drivers, traveling by stagecoach was slow and tedious. During the rainy seasons
of the year, the passengers were subjected to endless inconveniences, and often
times their lives were endangered. A journey of a hundred miles consumed more
time and was as expensive as a journey by railroad ten times that distance at the
present time. No one part of the country had any distinct advantages in road
improvement. The roads were likely to be cut in deep ruts, washed out, and even
impassable. Travelers, especially those from England, colnplained about the con-
ditions of stagecoach travel. In their many books of travel they compared con-
ditions in the United States with those in England, to the decided disadvantage ol
the former.
One of the best known of these travelers, Charles Augustus Murray, has given
interesting accounts of his experiences with stagecoach drivers; no doubt suci:
experiences were common everyday occurrences in the lives of the American travel-
ing public.
On leaving Fredericsburgh for Richmond, by the stage, I was
warned of the bad state of the roads; but, encouraged by what 1
had already gone through in safety, I smiled at such perils; and con-
fiding in the stout setting of my bones, resigned myself without fear
to a vehicle, in which I formed the ninth passenger, and which promised
to reach Richmond in twelve hours, the distance being about sixty 01
seventy miles. As we began the journey at two P. M., we hoped t(
conclude it about the same hour in the morning.
After jolting some eight miles in two hours, I began to doubt th«
calculation of speed; that of safely was placed agreeably beyond al
doubt, by meeting the stage from Richmond, containing several pas
sengers with their heads bandaged with blood-stained napkins. Wi
* Travels in North America. By The Hon. Charles Augustus Murray (London
1839), I, iSS-^'
INLAND COMMERCE AND IMPROVEMENTS 377
found on inquiry, that they had been upset only once, and had received
these cuts and contusions. I congratulated myself on being in this
''safety" line, as the opposition, or mail-stage, had upset twice that
same night, thereby proving that our chance of escape with life and
unbroken limbs was two to one greater than that of our mail-competi-
tors.
It is needless to dwell on the horrors of that night : it was found im-
possible to drag the load of passengers and luggage through the mud;
we were consequently divided into two stages; and I heard the negro
who drove the last, which contained my valuable person, say, as he
mounted the box at nightfall, "I hope we shan't up^f/, as I ha'nt driv'
this road this two month." Under his experimental guidance we
certainly did receive such a jolting as I had never supposed a carriage
capable of enduring; and the courage with which he led it on to charge
stumps and trees, and to plunge into mud-holes, in the dark, excited
my admiration. It called forth, however, other feelings from one of
my companions, who vented his alarm and anger in a variety of expres-
sions, which would have formed a valuable supplement to any dic-
tionary of malediction or blasphemy. We arrived only four or five
hours after the time appointed, and I felt nearly as much relieved as
when my foot first touched the shore of Fayal. The description here
given of this road is not overdrawn. I will defy pen, pencil, or malice
to do it; and it must be remembered, that it is the great high road
(1835) from the Capital of Virginia to the seat of the Federal Govern-
ment.
B. Plight of a Traveler in the South, 1835^
Another English traveler, Harriet Martineau, the " deaf lady," describes the
hardships of stage travel as follows:
I found, in travelling through the Carolinas and Georgia, that the
drivers consider themselves entitled to get on by any means they can
devise: that nobody helps and nobody hinders them. It was con-
stantly happening that the stage came to a stop on the brink of a wide
and a deep puddle, extending all across the road. The driver helped
himself, without scruple, to as many rails of the nearest fence as might
serve to fill up the bottom of the hole, or break our descent into it.
On inquiry, I found it was not probable that either road or fence would
be mended till both had gone to absolute destruction.
The traffic on these roads is so small, that the stranger feels himself
almost lost in the wilderness. In the course of several days' journey,
^ Society in' America. By Harriet Martineau (London, 1837), II, 172-6.
378 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
we saw, (with the exception of the wagons of a few encampments,)
only one vehicle besides our own. It was a stage returning from
Charleston. Our meeting in the forest was like the meeting of ships at
sea. We asked the passengers from the south for news from Charles-
ton and Europe; and they questioned us about the state of politics
at Washington. The eager vociferation of drivers and passengers was
such as is very unusual, out of exile. We were desired to give up all
thoughts of going by the eastern road to Charleston. The road might
be called impassable; and there was nothing to eat by the way. So
we described a circuit, by Camden and Columbia.
An account of an actual day's journey will give the best idea of
what travelling is in such places. We had travelled from Richmond,
Virginia, the day before, (March 2nd, 1835,) and had not had any
rest, when, at midnight, we came to a river which had no bridge.
The "scow" had gone over with another stage, and we stood under
the stars for a long time; hardly less than an hour. The scow was
only just large enough to hold the coach and ourselves; so that it was
thought safest for the passengers to alight, and go on board on foot.
In this process, I found myself over the ankles in mud. A few minutes :
after we had driven on again, on the opposite side of the river, we had
to get out to change coaches; after which we proceeded, without acci-
dent, though very slowly, till daylight. Then the stage sank down
into a deep rut, and the horses struggled in vain. We were informed
that we were "mired," and must all get out. I stood for sometime
to witness what is very pretty for once; but wearisome when it occurs
ten times a day. The driver carries an axe, as a part of the stage
apparatus. He cuts down a young tree, for a lever, which is intro-
duced under the nave of the sunken wheel; a log serving for a block.
The gentleman passengers all help; shouting to the horses, which tug
and scramble as vigorously as the gentlemen. We ladies sometimes
gave our humble assistance by blowing the driver's horn. Some-
times a cluster of negroes would assemble from a neighbouring planta-
tion; and in extreme cases, they would bring a horse, to add to oui
team. The rescue from the rut was effected in any time from a quartei
of an hour to two hours. . . .
. . . Half a mile before reaching the place where we were to havi
tea, the thorough-brace broke, and we had to walk through a snoTi
shower to the inn. We had not proceeded above a quarter of a mile
from this place when the traces broke. After this, we were allowec
to sit still in the carriage till near seven in the morning, when we wew
approaching Raleigh, North Carolina. We then saw a carriagi
INLAND COMMERCE AND IMPROVEMENTS 379
"mired" and deserted by driver and horses, but tenanted by some
travellers who had been waiting there since eight the evening before.
While we were pitying their fate, our vehicle once more sank into a
rut. It was, however, extricated in a short time, and we reached
Raleigh in safety.
II. Early Navigation of the Western Rivers
Primitive Methods^ 18 J2 ^
The Mississippi River and its tributaries were important factors in the economic
development of the United States. Down these streams the surplus products of
the western farms were sent to New Orleans, and from that point they were shipped
to the northern states or to Europe. Before the introduction of the steamboat on
the Ohio River in the year 181 1, some form of raft or flatboat was extensively
used by the settlers and traders for transporting goods on the river, and even
after the steamboat had come into general use as a carrier of freight upstream
these rude crafts were employed extensively in the down-river trade. Mr. Flint,
whose long residence in the Mississippi Valley made him an authority on early
river traffic, describes it as follows:
The barge is of the size of an Atlantic schooner, with a raised and
outlandish looking deck. It had sails, masts and rigging not unlike
a sea vessel, and carried from fifty to an hundred tons. It required
twenty-five or thirty hands to work it up stream. On the lower courses
of the Mississippi, when the wind did not serve, and the waters were
high, it was worked up stream by the operation that is called ' warp-
ing,' — a most laborious, slow and difficult mode of ascent, and in
which six or eight miles a day was good progress. It consisted in
having two yawls, the one in advance of the other, carrying out a
warp of some hundred yards in length, making it fast to a tree, and then
drawing the barge up to that tree by the warp. When that warp was
coiled, the yawl in advance had another laid, and so on alternately.
From ninety to an hundred days was a tolerable passage from New
Orleans to Cincinnati. In this way the intercourse between Pitts-
burgh, Cincinnati, Louisville, Nashville, and St. Louis, for the more
important purposes of commerce, was kept up with New Orleans.
One need only read the journal of a barge on such an ascent, to com-
prehend the full value of the invention of steam boats. They are now
gone into disuse, and we do not remember to have seen a barge for
some years, except on the waters above the mouth of the Ohio.
^ The History and Geography of the Mississippi Valley. By Timothy Flint
(Cincinnati, 1832), I, 151-3.
38o READINGS -IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
The keel boat is of a long, slender and elegant form, and generally
carries from fifteen to thirty tons. Its advantage is in its small draft
of water, and the lightness of its construction. It is still used on the
Ohio and upper Mississippi in low stages of water, and on all the
boatable streams where steam boats do not yet run. Its propelling
power is by oars, sails, setting poles, the cordelle, and when the waters
are high, and the boats run on the margin of the bushes, ' bush-whack-
ing,' or pulling up by the bushes. Before the invention of steam
boats, these boats were used in the proportion of six to one at the
present time.
The ferry fiat is a scow-boat, and when used as a boat of descent
for families, has a roof, or covering. These are sometimes, in the
vernacular phrase, called 'sleds.' The Alleghany or Mackinaw skiff,
is a covered skiff, carrying from six to ten tons; and is much used on j
the Alleghany, the Illinois, and the rivers of the upper Mississippi
and Missouri. Periogues are sometimes hollowed from one very large
tree, or from the trunks of two trees united, and fitted with a plank
rim. They carry from one to three tons. There are common skiffs,
canoes and 'dug-outs,' for the convenience of crossing the rivers; and
a select company of a few travellers often descend in them to New
Orleans. Hunters and Indians, and sometimes passengers, make long
journeys of ascent of the rivers in them. Besides these, there are
anomalous water crafts, that can hardly be reduced to any class, used
as boats of passage or descent. We have seen flat boats, worked by
a wheel, which was driven by the cattle, that were conveying to the
New Orleans market. There are horse boats of various constructions,
used for the most part as ferry boats; but sometimes as boats of
ascent. Two keel boats are connected by a platform. A pen holds
the horses, which by circular movement propel wheels. We saw
United States' troops ascending the Missouri by boats, propelled by
tread wheels; and we have, more than once, seen a boat moved rapidly
up stream by wheels, after the steam boat construction, propelled by
a man turning a crank.
But the boats of passage and conveyance, that remain after the
invention of steam boats, and are still important to those objects, an
keel boats and flats. The flat boats are called, in the vernaculi
phrase, ' Kentucky flats,' or ' broad horns.' They are simply an obloi
ark, with a roof slightly curved from the center to shed rain. Thi
are generally about fifteen feet wide, and from fifty to eighty,
sometimes an hundred feet in length. The timbers of the bottom
massive beams; and they are intended to be of great strength;
INLAND COMMERCE AND IMPROVEMENTS 381
to carry a burden of from two to four hundred barrels. Great num-
bers of cattle, hogs and horses are conveyed to market in them. We
have seen family boats of this description, fitted up for the descent of
families to the lower country, with a stove, comfortable apartments,
beds, and arrangements for commodious habitancy. We see in them
ladies, servants, cattle, horses, sheep, dogs and poultry, all floating
on the same bottom; and on the roof the looms, ploughs, spinning
wheels and domestic implements of the family.
Much of the produce of the upper country, even after the inven-
tion of steam boats, continues to descend to New Orleans in Kentucky
flats. They generally carry three hands; and perhaps a supernum-
erary fourth hand, a kind of supercargo. This boat, in the form of a
parallelogram, lying flat and dead in the water, and with square tim-
bers below its bottom planks, and carrying such a great weight, runs
on a sandbar with a strong headway, and plough^ its timbers into
the sand; and it is, of course, a work of extreme labor to get the boat
afloat again. Its form and its weight render it difficult to give it a
direction with any power of oars. Hence, in the shallow waters, it
often gets aground. When it has at length cleared the shallow waters,
and gained the heavy current of the Mississippi, the landing such an
unwieldy water craft, in cuch a current, is a matter of no little diffi-
culty and danger.
III. Effects of the Steamboat on Inland Commerce
Changes in Rates and Speed, i8i6-i8j6 ^
The introduction of the steamboat on the western rivers stimulated freight and
passenger traffic by reducing fares and charges of transportation and by furnishing
additional safety and comfort. An authority on this subject described the effects
as follows:
The extent to which steam navigation has improved our
country, is scarcely realized even by those who have travelled over it
the most. The Hudson river, from the first voyage of the North
River, Fulton's steamboat, up to the present time, has remained at
the head of all competitors in river navigation. We had then two
trips per week, each consuming from thirty to thirty-six hours; we
have now four passenger boats per day over the entire route, and many
making short trips, besides those used for towing barges and canal
boats; the passenger boats making the entire trip of one hundred and
^ Eighty Years^ Progress. By Thomas P. Kettell (Hartford, 1869), 234-40.
382 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
fifty miles in from ten to twelve hfturs. The increased prosperity of
New York, growing out of this immense traffic by steamboats alone,
is very great, but even this is small when compared with the naviga-
tion of the Mississippi and the other western rivers. In 1856 there
were over one thousand steamboats and propellers on the western
waters, costing not less than nineteen millions of dollars, and of a
carrying capacity of four hundred and forty-three thousand tons. Of
these boats, the smallest was the Major Darien, of ten tons, built at
Freedom in 1852; and the largest was the Eclipse, of one thousand
one hundred and seventeen tons, built at New Albany the same year.
Thus, on the western waters, in the short space of forty-five years,
steam created a business that absorbed nineteen millions of dollars in
steamboats alone.
Up to the year 181 1, the only regular method of transportation
had been by means of flat boats, which consumed three or four months
in the passage from New Orleans to Pittsburg. The price of passage
was then one hundred and sixty dollars; freight, six dollars and
seventy-five cents per hundred pounds. The introduction of steam has
reduced the price of passage between these two cities to thirty dollars,
and merchandise is carried the whole distance for a price which may
be regarded as merely nominal. Besides this great saving of time and
money effected by steam navigation on these waters, the comparative
safety of steam conveyance is an item which especially deserves oui
notice. Before the steam dispensation began, travellers and mer-
chants were obliged to trust their lives and property to the bargemen
many of whom were suspected, with very good reason, to be in con-
federacy with the land robbers who infested the shores of the Ohio
and the pirates who resorted to the islands of the Mississippi. Thes«
particulars being understood, we are prepared to estimate the valu«
and importance of the services which the steam engine has renders
to the commerce and prosperity of the western states.
In 181 1, Messrs. Fulton and Livingston, having established
ship-yard at Pittsburg for the purpose of introducing steam navigatioi
on the western waters, built an experimental boat for this service -
and this was the first steamboat that ever floated on the western rivers
It was furnished with a stern wheel and two masts — for Mr. Fultoi
believed, at that time, that the occasional use of sails would be in
dispensable. This first western steamboat was called the Orleai
her capacity was one hundred tons. In the winter of 181 2,
made her first trip from Pittsburg to New Orleans in fourt(
days.
INLAND COMMERCE AND IMPROVEMENTS s^t,
The first appearance of this vessel on the Ohio river produced, as
the reader may suppose, not a little excitement and admiration. A
steamboat at that day was, to common observers, as great a wonder
as a navigable balloon would be at the present. The banks of the
river, in some places, were thronged with spectators, gazing in speech-
less astonishment at the puffing and smoking phenomenon. The
average speed of this boat was only about three miles per hour. Before
her ability to move through the water without the assistance of sails
or oars had been fully exemplified, comparatively few persons believed
that she could possibly be made to answer any purpose of real utility.
In fact, she had made several voyages before the general prejudice
began to subside, and for some months, many of the river merchants
preferred the old mode of transportation, with all its risks, delays,
and extra expense, rather than make use of such a contrivance as a
steamboat, which, to their apprehensions, appeared too marvellous
and miraculous for the business of every-day life. How slow are the
masses of mankind to adopt improvements, even when they appear
to be most obvious and unquestionable!
The second steamboat of the west, was a diminutive vessel called
the Comet. She was rated at twenty-five tons. Daniel D. Smith
was the owner, and D. French the builder of this boat. Her machin-
ery was on a plan for which French had obtained a patent in 1809.
She went to Louisville in the summer of 1813, and descended to New
Orleans in the spring of 18 14. She afterward made two voyages to
Natchez, and was then sold, taken to pieces, and the engine was put
up in a cotton factory. The Vesuvius was the next; she was built
by Mr. Fulton, at Pittsburg, for a company, the several members of
which resided at New York, Philadelphia, and New Orleans. She
sailed under the command of Captain Frank Ogden, for New Orleans,
in the spring of 18 14. From New Orleans, she started for Louisville,
in July of the same year, but was grounded on a sand-bar, seven hun-
dred miles up the Mississippi, where she remained until the 3d of
December following, when, being floated off by the tide, she returned
to New Orleans. In 181 5-16, she made regular trips for several
months, from New Orleans to Natchez, under the command of Captain
Clement. This gentleman was soon after succeeded by Captain
John D. Hart, and while approaching New Orleans, with a valuable
cargo on board, she took fire and burned to the water's edge. After
being submerged for several months, her hulk was raised and re-
fitted. She was afterward in the Louisville trade, and was condemned
in 1819.
384 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
In 1 818, the first steamboat was built for Lake Erie and the up]
lakes, at Black Rock, on the Niagara river, for the late Dr. I. li.
Stuart, of Albany, N. Y., by Noah Brown, of New York city. She
was a very handsome vessel, 360 tons burden, brig rigged, and her
engine, on the plan of a Boulton and Watt square engine, was made
by Robert McQueen, at the corner of Centre and Duane streets,
New York city; her cylinder was 40 inches diameter, 4 feet stroke.
The materials for making the boiler were sent from New York, and
the boiler was made at Black Rock — 9 feet diameter, 24 feet long —
a circular boiler, with one return flue, called a kidney flue, seldom,
if ever, carrying more than nine inches of steam. This steamer was
called the Walk-in- the-Water, after a celebrated Indian chief in Michi-
gan. Her engines were transported from New York to Albany by
sloops, and from Albany to Buffalo by large six and eight horse Penn-
sylvania teams. Some of the engine was delivered in fifteen days
time, and some was on the road about twenty-five days.
The trip from Black Rock, or Buffalo, to Detroit, consumed about
forty hours in good weather, using thirty-sk to forty cords of wood the
trip. The price of passage in the main cabin was eighteen dollars;
from Buffalo to Erie (Penn.), six dollars; to Cleveland, twelve dollars;
to Sandusky (Ohio), fifteen dollars; to Detroit, eighteen dollars.
The strength 6i the rapids at the head of the Niagara river, between
Buffalo and Black Rock, was so great, that besides the power of the
engine, the steamer had to have the aid of eight yoke of oxen to get
her up on to the lake, a distance of about two and one-half miles.
In those days, the passenger and freighting business was so small,
that one dividend only was made to the owners for the first three
years from the earnings of the steamer. In 1821, in the fall, the
steamer was totally lost in a terrible gale. On the coming winter,
a new steamer was built at Buffalo, by Mr. Noah Brown of New
York — a very strong, brig-rigged vessel. She was called the
Superior, flush decks fore and aft; the first steamer, the Walk-in-the-
Water, having had a high quarter or poop deck.
Compare the time and expense of travelling in those days with
the present time! Mr. Calhoun (now living), the engineer of the
Walk-in-the- Water, says, "Every two years I used to return to New
York from Buffalo in the fall, and in the spring from New York to
Buffalo. I have been three and four days, by stage, to Albanyj
never less than three days, and sometimes near five days; the stage
fare was ten dollars to Albany. From Albany to Buffalo, I have
been ten days in getting through; the shortest time was eight days;
INLAND COMMERCE AND IMPROVEMENTS 385
the stage fare through, was twenty-one dollars. How is it now ? My
usual expense in going to Buffalo from Albany was thirty dollars,
including meals and sleeping." Such facts show the advantages we
have obtained from the use of steam in our river navigation.
The boats that then plied upon the Hudson river, would not be
sufficient to carry the passengers' baggage of the present day. The
first boat was only 160 tons, while the New World, built in 1*847,
was of 1400. The latter has made the trip from New York to Albany
in seven hours and fifteen minutes, including nine landings of say five
minutes each; the actual running time being six hours and twenty
minutes; distance, one hundred and fifty miles — performed by the
North River in thirty-six hours.
IV. Federal Aid for Internal Improvements
A. Internal Improvements and the National Defense, 18 ig ^
In the early part of the century, internal improvements were considered to be
closely related to the national defense. Hence there was a feeling that the United
States government ought to aid in the building of such improvements. On this
subject, John C. Calhoun, Secretary of War in President Monroe's Cabinet, ad-
vised as follows:
It remains, in relation to the defence of the Atlantic frontier, to
consider the means of communication between it and the western
States, which require the aid of the Government. Most of the
observations made relative to the increased strength and capacity
of the country to bear up under the pressure of war, from the coast-
wise communication, are applicable in a high degree at present, and
are daily becoming more so, to those with the western States; and
should a war for conquest ever be waged against us, (an event not
probable, but not to be laid entirely out of view,) the roads and canals
necessary to complete the communication with that portion of our
country would be of the utmost importance.
The interest of commerce and the spirit of rivalry between the
great Atlantic cities will do much to perfect the means of intercourse
with the west. The most important lines of communication appear
to be from Albany to the lakes; from Philadelphia, Baltimore, Wash-
ington, and Richmond, to the Ohio river; and from Charleston and
Augusta to the Tennessee — all of which are now commanding the
^ Report of John C. Calhoun, Secretary of War, on Internal Improvements. Ameri-
can State Papers (Washington, 1834). Series Miscellaneous, II, 535-6.
386 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
attention, in a greater or less degree, of the sections of the country
immediately interested. But in such great undertakings, so interesting
in every point of view to the whole Union, and which may ultimately
become necessary to its defence, the expense ought not to fall wholly
on the portions of the country more immediately interested. A>^
the Government has a deep stake in them, and as the system of d
fence will not be perfect without their completion, it ought at least
to bear a proportional share of the expense of their construction.
I proceed next to consider the roads and canals connected with the
defence of our northern frontier. That portion of it which extends
to the east of Lake Champlain has not heretofore been the scene of
extensive military operations, and I am not sufficiently acquainted
with the nature of the country to venture an opinion whether we may
hereafter be called on to make considerable military efforts in that
quarter. Without, then, designating any military improvements as
connected with this portion of our northern frontier, I would suggest
the propriety, should Congress approve of the plan for a military
survey of the country, to be hereafter proposed, to make a survey
of it the duty of the engineers who may be designated for that
purpose.
For the defence of the other part of this line of frontier, the most
important objects are, a canal or water communication between
Albany and Lake George and Lake Ontario, and between Pitts-
burg and Lake Erie. The two former have been commenced by the
State of New York, and will, when completed, connected with the
great inland navigation along the coast, enable the Gk)vernment, at
a moderate expense and in a short time, to transport munitions of
war, and to concentrate its troops from any portion of the Atlantic
States, fresh and unexhausted by the fatigue of marching, on the
inland frontier of the State of New York. The road, commence^
by order of the Executive, from Plattsburg to Sackett's Harbor, is
essentially connected with military operations on this portion of the
northern frontier. A water communication from Pittsburg to Lake
Erie would greatly increase our power on the upper lakes. The
Allegany river, by its main branch, is said to be navigable within seven
miles of Lake Erie, and by French creek within sixteen miles. Pitts- ~
burg is the great military depot of the country to the west of tin
Alleganies, and, if it were connected by a canal with Lake Erie, would
furnish military supplies with facility to the upper lakes, as well as to
the country watered by the Mississippi. If to these communicatioi
we add a road from Detroit to Ohio, which has already been con
INLAND COMMERCE AND IMPROVEMENTS 387
menced, and a canal from the Illinois river to Lake Michigan, which
the growing population of the State of Illinois renders very important,
all the facilities which would be essential "to carry on military opera-
tions in time of war, and the transportation of the munitions of war"
for the defence of the western portion of our northern frontier, would
be afforded.
It only remains to consider the system of roads and canals con-
nected with the defence of our southern frontier, or that on the
Gulf of Mexico. For the defence of this portion of our country,
though at present weak of itself, nature has done much. The bay of
Mobile, and the entrance into the Mississippi through all its channels,
are highly capable of defence. A military survey has been made,
and the necessary fortifications have been commenced, and will be
in a few years completed. But the real strength of this frontier is
the Mississippi, which is no less the cause of its security than that
of its commerce and wealth. Its rapid stream, aided by the force
of steam, can, in the hour of danger, concentrate at once an irresistible
force. Made strong by this noble river, little remains to be done
by roads and canals for the defence of our southern frontier. The
continuation of the road along the Atlantic coast from Milledgeville
to New Orleans, and the completion of the road which has already
been commenced from Tennessee river to the same place, with the
inland navigation through the canal of Carondelet, Lake Pontchar-
train, and the islands along the coast, to Mobile, covered against the
operations of a naval force, every facility required for the transporta-
tion of munitions of war, and movements and concentration of troops,
to protect this distant and important frontier, would be afforded.
Such are the roads and canals which military operations in time of
war, the transportation of the munitions of war, and the more com-
plete defence of the United States, require.
Many of the roads and canals which have been suggested are no
doubt of the first importance to the commerce, the manufacture,
the agriculture, and political prosperity of the country, but are not,
for that reason, less useful or necessary for military purposes. It is,
in fact, one of the great advantages of our country, enjoying so many
others, that, whether we regard its internal improvements in relation
to military, civil, or political purposes, vejy nearly the same system,
in all its parts, is required. The road or canal can scarcely be desig-
nated, which is highly useful for military operations, which is not
equally required for the industry or political prosperity of the com-
munity. If those roads or canals had been pointed out which are
388 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
necessary for military purposes only, the list would have been small
indeed. I have, therefore, presented all, without regarding the fact
that they might be employed for other uses which, in the event of
war, would be necessary to give economy, certainty, and success to
our military operations, and which, if they had been completed before
the late war, would, by their saving in that single contest in men,
money, and reputation, have more than indemnified the country
for the expense of their construction. I have not prepared an es-
timate of exp)enses, nor pointed out the particular routes for the
roads of canals recommended, as I conceive that this can be ascer-
tained with satisfaction only by able and skilful engineers, after a
careful survey and examination. . . .
B. Veto of the Maysville Road Bill, i8jo ^
By 1830 a majority of the people opposed granting federal aid for internal
improvements. President Jackson's veto of the Maysville Road Bill, which reflected
the feeling of that majority, caused the states to take up the work. Jackson's
objections were largely on constitutional grounds, but he also argued that it
was economically unsound for the government to undertake such enterprises:
Gentlemen: I have maturely considered the bill proposing to
authorize '*a subscription of stock in the Maysville, Washington,
Paris, and Lexington Turnpike Road Company," and now return
the same to the House of Representatives, in which it originated,
with my objections to its passage. . . .
In the Administration of Mr. Jefferson we have two examples of
the exercise of the right of appropriation, which in the considera-
tions that led to their adoption and in their effects upon the public
mind have had a greater agency in marking the character of the power
than any subsequent events. I allude to the payment of $15,000,000
for the purchase of Louisiana and to the original appropriation for
the construction of the Cumberland road, the latter act deriving
much weight from the acquiescence and approbation of three of the
most powerful of the original members of the Confederacy, expressed
through their respective legislatures. Although the circumstances of
the latter case may be such as to deprive so much of it as relates to
the actual construction of the road of the force of an obligatory
exposition of the Constitution, it must, nevertheless, be admitted
that so far as the mere appropriation of money is concerned they
present the principle in its most imposing aspect. No less than twenty-
* Messages and Papers of the Presidents. Edited by James D. Richardson
([Washington], 1895-1903), H, 483, 485-61 492-
INLAND COMMERCE AND IMPROVEMENTS 389
three different laws have been passed, through all the forms of the
Constitution, appropriating upward of $2,500,000 out of the National
Treasury in support of that improvement, with the approbation of
every President of the United States, including my predecessor, since
its commencement.
Independently of the sanction given to appropriations for the
Cumberland and other roads and objects under this power, the Ad-
ministration of Mr. Madison was characterized by an act which
furnishes the strongest evidence of his opinion of its extent. A bill
was passed through both Houses of Congress and presented for his
approval, "setting apart and pledging certain funds for constructing
roads and canals and improving the navigation of water courses, in
order to facilitate, promote, and give security to internal commerce
among the several States and to render more easy and less expensive
the means and provisions for the common defense." Regarding the
bill as asserting a power in the Federal Government to construct
roads and canals within the limits of the States in which they were
made, he objected to its passage on the ground of its unconstitu-
tionality, declaring that the assent of the respective States in the mode
provided by the bill could not confer the power in question; that the
only cases in which the consent and cession of particular States can
extend the power of Congress are those specified and provided for
in the Constitution, and superadding to these avowals his opinion
that "a restriction of the power 'to provide for the common defense
and general welfare' to cases which are to be provided for by the
expenditure of money would still leave within the legislative power
of Congress all the great and most important measures of Govern-
ment, money being the ordinary and necessary means of carrying
them into execution." I have not been able to consider these declara-
tions in any other point of view than as a concession that the right
of appropriation is not limited by the power to carry into effect the
measure for which the money is asked, as was formerly contended.
The views of Mr. Monroe upon this subject were not left to infer-
ence. During his Administration a bill was passed through both
Houses of Congress conferring the jurisdiction and prescribing the
mode by which the Federal Government should exercise it in the
case of the Cumberland road. He returned it with objections to
its passage, and in assigning them took occasion to say that in the
early stages of the Government he had inclined to the construction
that it had no right to expend money except in the performance of
acts authorized by the other specific grants of power, according to a
390 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
strict construction of them, but that on further reflection and obsen
tion his mind had undergone a change; that his opinion then was
"that Congress have an unlimited power to raise money, and that in
its appropriation they have a discretionary power, restricted only by
the duty to appropriate it to purposes of common defense, and of
general, not local, national, not State, benefit; " and this was avowed to
be the governing principle through the residue of his Administration.
The views of the last Administration are of such recent date as to
render a particular reference to them unnecessary. It is well known
that the appropriating power, to the utmost extent which had been
claimed for it, in relation to internal improvements was fully recog-
nized and exercised by it. . . .
If it be the desire of the people that the agency of the Federal
Government should be confined to the appropriation of money in
aid of such undertakings, in virtue of State authorities, then the
occasion, the manner, and the extent of the appropriations should be
made the subject of constitutional regulation. This is the more
necessary in order that they may be equitable among the several
States, promote harmony between different sections of the Union
and their representatives, preserve other parts of the Constitution
from being undermined by the exercise of doubtful powers or the
too great extension of those which are not so, and protect the whole
subject against the deleterious influence of combinations to carry by
concert measures which, considered by themselves, might meet but
little countenance.
V. Effects of the Erie Canal
Development of Internal Improvements in the West, 182 5-1850 '
The opening of the Erie Canal in 1825, and its immediate success as a means of
connecting New York City with the Great Lake trade, caused similar attempts
to be made in other states. The cities of Philadelphia and Baltimore began at
once to project railroads and canals in an efTort to get western trade, while Ohio,
Indiana, Illinois and other western states undertook elalx)rate systems of internal
improvements. Mr. H. V. Poor, whose writings on railroads and canals have come
to be accepted as authoritative, discusses these undertakings as follows:
Previous to the construction of the Erie Canal, the cost of trani-
porting a ton of merchandise or produce from the City of New Yolk
to the City of Buffalo was $100. The time required was 20 days!
» Manual of the Railroads of the United States for 1868-69- By H. V.
(New York, 1868), 12-15.
INLAND COMMERCE AND IMPROVEMENTS 391
The cost and the time involved in this case was a striking illustration
of the condition of the whole country; of the necessity of improved
highways, and of the influence they have exerted in the creation
of wealth, as well as their social and political importance. Upon
the opening of the canal, the cost of transportation from Buffalo to
New York was reduced from $100 to $5 per ton, and the time from
20 to 6 days. Previous to its construction, wheat grown in Central
and Western New York was floated, in arks, down the Delaware and
Susquehanna Rivers to market — to Philadelphia and Baltimore.
The City of New York — which now draws from districts 2,000
miles distant, by the routes used, its vast supplies of grain for dis-
tribution throughout all the Eastern States, and for its foreign trade
— was, a little over forty years ago, almost completely cut off from
the trade of its own State. The cost of transporting wheat for 300
miles over ordinary highways will equal its average value at the point
of consumption. Indian corn will bear transportation over earth
roads only about 100 miles. With the improvements that have been
made in the construction of highways, the great bulk of supplies
of wheat and corn for the Eastern markets are now grown in Central
Illinois and in the vast region lying to the west and northwest of Lake
Michigan. As fast as our people have moved westward in their
triumphal march across the continent, the railway which they have
taken with them has given a high commercial value to whatever they
produce, no matter how far distant from the points of consumption.
Their progress, wealth, and we may say, civilization, have been the
creation, within 50 years, of the inventive genius of the race.
The success of the Erie Canal had an electric effect upon the
whole country, and similar works were everywhere projected. The
States of Pennsylvania, Maryland, Ohio, Indiana and Illinois at once
embarked upon elaborate systems designed to give to every portion
of their States the advantage of such works. Virginia, also, undertook
the construction of a canal from the Chesapeake up the valley of the
James River to the Ohio. We have not the space to give even a
sketch of the progress and results of these undertakings. While
very great advantages in many cases were secured, all the canals
constructed in the United States, except the Erie, the Delaware and
Raritan, and the Chesapeake and Delaware, may be regarded as
commercial failures. They became so from the discovery of a better
mode of transportation — the Railway. The State of Pennsyl-
vania, alone, completed about 1,000 miles of canaLwithin its territory,
the whole of which have, within a few years, been disposed of at
S')2 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
nominal prices to private companies. Their value had been almost
entirely superseded by railways, which private enterprise soon con-
structed upon all their routes. Already the use of portions of these
canals has been abandoned, while the earnings of others, that are still
kept up hardly meet the cost of their maintenance.
The great work which the State of Maryland undertook — the
Chesapeake and Ohio Canal — was carried only to Cumberland, a
distance of about i8o miles. It has proved to be nearly valueless,
even as a local work. The James River and Kanawha Canal reached
many years ago, its final terminus at the base of the Alleghany Moun-
tains. The State of Ohio constructed two lines of limited capacity
from Lake Erie to the Ohio — one from Cleveland to Portsmouth,
and the other from Toledo to Cincinnati. Until railroads were con-
structed, which now cover that State like a network, the canals
performed a highly useful service. They have now practically
ceased to be carriers either of produce or merchandize. The State of
Indiana was not so fortunate as Ohio. Of an immense extent of
projected lines she was able to complete only one work, the Wabas'i
and Erie Canal, which was opened from Toledo to Evansville, on the
Ohio River. The portion of this work below Terre Haute was
speedily abandoned, while that north of it is now let to private parties
upon the sole condition of keeping it in repair. The State of Illinois
was enabled to complete only one of the numerous works undertaken
— a canal from Lake Michigan, at Chicago, to the navigable waters
of the Illinois River. This canal for many years was a highly useful
and important work. Its route, like that of the Erie Canal, is strik-
ingly favorable. Its summit is only 8 feet above Lake Michigan.
So nicely poised in the interior of the Continent are the Great Lakes,
that a depression of their eastern bank only 8 feet below its present
level would send their flood of waters — which, forming the cataract
of Niagara, now find their outlet under the Arctic climate of the North
Atlantic — down the Mississippi to the torrid regions of the Gulf
of Mexico. Such topographical conditions on so vast a scale, have
been contrived, it would seem, for the express purpose of supplying
the most perfect means of intercommunication, and are fitted tc
excite, in the highest degree, admiration and wonder. When unitec
to a genial climate and a wealth in mineral and soil such as are nowhew
else found, they must render the country possessing such element!
of power the theatre upon which is to be enacted the greatest drami
of human life yet seen. . . .
INLAND COMMERCE AND IMPROVEMENTS 393
VI. Early Development of Railroads
Location and Construction, 1826-1850 ^
The success of the English railroads stimulated their building in America. Here
and there short lines were laid down, primarily for the purpose of acting as feeders
for canals or rivers. At first, they were handicapped by lack of effective motive
power. Attempts were made to move the cars by the use of sails. The most
( satisfactory power was found for several years to be horses. These gave way to
J, steam, the use of which gave the railroad a decided advantage over all other means
\ of inland transportation.
The excitement in relation to canals and steamboats was yet at
its zenith, when the air began to be filled with rumors of the new
application of steam to land carriages and to railroads. There were
many inventions and patents at home and abroad in relation to car-
riages propelled upon common roads by steam, but these seem never
to have attained much success, although attempts to perfect them
are still made with great perseverance. On the other hand, the use
of railroads from small beginnings has reached a magnitude which
overshadows the wildest imaginings of the most sanguine. In 1825
descriptions came across the water of the great success of the Darling-
ton railroad, which was opened to supply London with coal, and which
had passenger cars moved by steam at the rate of seven miles per hour.
The most animated controversy sprang up in relation to the possi-
bility of such roads in England, and was shared in to some extent on
this side of the Atlantic. With the national energy of character,
the idea had no sooner become disseminated than it was acted upon.
The construction of railroads in America is usually ascribed to the
emulation excited by the success of the Liverpool and Manchester
railway. This appears not to have been the case, however, since
some of the most important works in this country were projected and
commenced before the Liverpool and Manchester road was built.
The act of Parliament for the construction of that road was passed
in 1826, and the road itself was finished and opened in September,
1830, 31 miles long; but the Massachusetts Quincy road, three miles
from Quincy to Neponset, was opened in 1827, and a great celebration
was held in consequence. The celebrated Mauch Chunk railroad of
Pennsylvania was begun in 1826, and finished in the following year.
On that road the horses which draw up the empty coal wagons are
sent down on the cars which descend by their own gravity. This
contrivance was borrowed by the Mauch Chunk road from the
1 Eighty Years' Progress. By Thomas P. Kettell (Hartford, 1869), 191-3.
394 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY ^
Darlington road, similarly situated, in England. It is to be remarked
that both the Quincy and the Mauch Chunk roads were horse roads;
the locomotive was not at first introduced. In 1828, twelve miles
of the Baltimore and Ohio railroad were completed, two years before
the Manchester road was opened. In the same year, 1828, the South
Carolina road, from Charleston to Hamburg, was surveyed, and in
Massachusetts the city of Boston voted the construction of a road
from that city to the Hudson at Albany. The first portion of that
road, however, Boston to Worcester, 44 miles, was not opened until
1835. The second road finished in the United States was the Rich- I
mond, Va., road, thirteen miles to Chesterfield, in 1831, and in the j
same year that running from New Orleans, five miles to Lake Pont- |
chartrain, was opened. Thus roads were well adopted in public i
opinion here before the great success of the Manchester road was j
known, but which gave an undoubted impulse to the fever. During
the excitement in relation to "rail" roads, a writer in a Providence
paper thus satirized the condition of the Connecticut roads. He
claimed the invention of the cheapest "rail" roads, and proved it
thus: "Only one English engine alone costs $2,000, which sum the
whole of our apparatus does not much exceed, as figures will prove;
for 700 good chestnut rails at $3, amounts to only $21, and it ought
to be remembered that this is all the expense we are at, and the
inference is conclusive in our favor. We place our rails fifty to the
mile by the side of the road, to pry out the wheels when they get
stuck, and hoist behind when wanted." The public were, however,
no longer to be satisfied with this kind of "rail" road. They em-
barked in the new enterprise with such vigor, that in 1836 two hundred
companies had been organized, and 1,003 J miles were opened in eleven
states. These were highly speculative years, however, and the revul-
sion brought matters to a stand.
It was at once apparent to the commercial mind that if railroads
would perform what was promised for them, geographical position
was no longer important to a city. In other words, that railroads
would bring Boston into as intimate connection with every part of
the interior as New York could be. The large water communica-
tion that enabled New York by means of steamboats to concentrate
trade from all quarters, could not now compete with the rails that
would confer as great advantages upon Boston. Indeed, Boston had
now availed herself of steam power. Up to 1828 she owned no
steamers. The Benjamin Franklin, built in that year, was the first,
and her steam tonnage is now but 9,998 tons. When she bought her
INLAND COMMERCE AND IMPROVEMENTS 395
first steamboat, however, she was laying out those railroad connections
that she has since pushed so vigorously, and they have paid an enor-
mous interest, if nor directly to the builders, at least to the general
interests of the city.
It is to be remarked that the national government expended, as
we have seen, largely in the construction of highways, the clearing out
of rivers, and the improvement of harbors. The people have by
individual taxes mostly constructed the earth roads of this country.
The canals have, however, with a few exceptions, been state works,
built by the proceeds of state loans, with the aid of lands donated by
the federal government. These lands were made marketable and
valuable by the action of the canals in aid of which they were granted.
The railroads of the country have been, as a whole, built on a differ-
ent plan, viz., by corporations, or chartered companies of individuals.
These associations have not, however, themselves subscribed the
whole of the money, probably not more than half, but they have
found it to their interest to borrow the money on mortgage of the
works. The great object of the companies has not been so much to
derive a direct profit from the investment, as to cause the construo
tion of a highway, which should by its operation increase business,
enhance the value of property, and swell the floating capital of the
country by making available considerable productions of industry,
which before were not marketable, since the influences of a railroad
in a new district is perhaps, if not to create, at least to bring into the
general stock more capital than is absorbed in its construction.
Thus in the last twenty-five years, a thousand millions of dollars
have been spent in the construction of roads, and yet capital is pro-
portionally more abundant now than before this vast expenditure,
and land has, in railroad localities, increased by a money value greater
than the cost of the roads! We have seen that before the operation
of canals, land transportation was, and is now remote from these
works, one cent per mile per hundred. If a barrel of flour is then
worth in market five dollars, a transportation of 300 miles would
cost more than its whole value; but by rail it may be carried from
Cincinnati to New York for one dollar. Thus railroads give circula-
tion to all the surplus capital that is created by labor within their
circle. It is on this principle that may be explained the immense
prosperity that has been seen to attend the enormous expenditure
for railroads, particularly during the last ten years.
396 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
VII. Railroads versus Canals
A. Arguments for Railroads in i8j2 ^
Even before the completion of the Erie Canal, experiments in railroad building
were being made. As soon as the latter appeared to be practicable and likely
to compete with the canals for freight and passenger traffic, the friends of the
canals began an agitation against the building of railroads. Work on the Balti-
more & Ohio Railroad was retarded for years by the opposition on the part of the
promoters of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal. Likewise in New York the state
discriminated against the New York Central Railroad in favor of the Erie Canal.
Naturally the friends of each enterprise endeavored to convince the people of the
desirability of building canals or railroads as the case might be. The controversy
at last reached the stage where Congress investigated the merits of the claims
of each, the main points of issue of which were as follows:
The various means which human ingenuity has devised for effect-
ing an extensive intercourse in the present state of knowledge, consist
of roads, railways, and canals.
The enterprise of our citizens was, at an early period, turned to
the first, and, if we may credit accounts on this subject, scarcely
kss anxiety was felt at that time to obtain grants from the Legis-
lature for the construction of turnpike roads, than is now evinced to
obtain railroad privileges. These early enterprises did not yield
much pecuniary profit to the stockholders; nevertheless they were -
incalculable good to this young but growing country. The faciUti^
of intercourse were promoted, and the general interests of the com-
munity were advanced. Next in succession came the desire f( -^
canals. The State having yielded her assent, the construction of tl
Erie canal presented at once a new and interesting view of the ben*
fits of this mode of internal communication — the pubHc mind aga \
became engaged in works of internal improvement, and, to wh.
extent this feeling prevailed, may be learned from the foUowii
extract taken from the message of the Governor in the year i8j;
"The canals, which now principally occupy the pubhc attention,
embrace a navigable union of the principal bays on Long Island -
of the Delaware and Hudson rivers — of the Erie canal, with ti
east and west branches of the Susquehannah — with the Allcghan\
river — with Lake Ontario, by Great Sodus bay — with Black and
St. Lawrence rivers, and between the latter river and Lake Cham-
plain; and even a canal from Lake Erie to the Hudson river, by ar^
* DocumetUs in Relation to the Comparative Merits of Canals and Railroc.^
Submitted by Mr. Howard of Maryland. (Doc, loi, Committee Report on Steam
Carriages, etc., 22d Congress, ist session, 221-5.)
INLAND COMMERCE AND IMPROVEMENTS 397
entire new route, has been suggested as practicable and expedient,
and urged with great earnestness and energy." At the time this mes-
sage was communicated to the Legislature, only one charter for a
railroad had been granted, and of so little importance was this new
mode of conveyance considered, that the Governor did not even allude
to the subject, and individuals could not be found possessed of
means and faith sufficient to fill the stock and undertake the enter-
prise. The public have thus been led on from one useful and patriotic
improvement to another, constantly developing new resources, and
holding out for example and emulation some of the most bold, useful,
and successful enterprises, that any country in any age has ever wit-
nessed. From the knowledge we possess of the rapid advance of
our fellow citizens in this knowledge of their wants and resources,
and the most efficient manner of developing them, it will not be
necessary for us to more than hint at the difference between the two
last mentioned improvements. . . .
Canals are confined to comparatively low districts, on account
of the necessity of an adequate supply of water, and of the expense
and delay of locks and lockage. Railways may be made to traverse
regions however elevated, and the ascents and descents are not only
not limited, but they are overcome in a comparatively short space
of time, owing to the great superiority which inclined planes possess
over locks.
Canals experience the change of the seasons most sensibly; the
drought, the floods, and the frost, are serious and insurmountable
impediments to their construction, and whether they be constructed
in the frigid, temperate, or torrid zone, the effect of such changes
cannot be avoided.
Railways are said not to be affected by either; and certainly the
two first cannot operate upon them. The last has been a subject
of speculation among the inexperienced, and, as the construction of
railways in this country is of so recent date, perhaps we may not be
enabled to rely with implicit confidence on such experiments as have
been made.
The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company, however, furnishes
some evidence on this point, and would seem to put this question
at rest. Under date of the 31st of December last, the Baltimore
American says: "while all the communications by river and canal
throughout the country are suspended on account of the ice, our great ,
railroad continues in active and steady operation, without the least '
interruption or hindrance from frost, snow, or any other obstacle. The
398 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY fl
passenger carriages, generally full both ways, have traversed the line
of sixty miles between Baltimore and Frederick, daily, since the
opening of the road^ This fact tends to prove that railroads may
be used at all seasons of the year. The difference, however, between
the climate of Maryland and New York, may be assigned as a reason
for still urging this latter objection, and is certainly worthy of
consideration.
In consequence of the almost exclusive use of steam power on rail-
ways, this question, on some routes, may be one of serious import, and
would require close and satisfactory investigation, before entering upon
the construction of any road, the utility and profit of which depend
solely on the business of the winter: on any other route it cannot
be a matter of so much moment, for if it would be a good reason to
deter from the construction of railroads, it might be urged with much
more force against canals. Many propositions have been made to
obviate this difficulty, but as the question does not seem to be en-
tirely settled by experience, the committee are not prepared to point
out any remedy or express any opinion. They may, however, safely
anticipate, that all obstacles which are not insurmountable, will be
overcome by the ingenuity and enterprise of our citizens. Many
difficulties have already been overcome, and, as the spirit of im-
provement has, by recent discovery, received a new impetus,
we are warranted in the most sanguine anticipations of entire
success. . . .
"Twenty years ago, we believe, the mails did not travel faster
than about seven miles an hour. From seven miles it was raised
to eight, and every one cried what an improvement! From eight it
was raised to nine, and this was hailed as nothing less than 'pro-
digious!' " Attempts are making to force it up to ten miles an hour,
but to any thing beyond this, to a certainty, horse power fails us.
How then shall we find terms adequate to express the value of a dis-
covery that carries us at once from ten to twenty or thirty milej
an hour?
The experiments which have been made in England go far to pnnt
that we have not yet arrived at the point where improvement in s])i
must cease. The present average of speed upon the Liverpool aii'
Manchester railway is sixteen miles per hour. The maximun
velocity, unloaded, is thirty-two miles per hour. With a load
thirteen tons, including many passengers, Mr. Stevenson's engii.>
the Rocket, travelled at the rate of fifteen miles an hour; and th<
engine of Braithwaite and Erickson, of London, moved at the aslD'i
INLAND COMMERCE AND IMPROVEMENTS 399
ishing speed of twenty-eight miles an hour. "It seemed indeed,"
said a spectator, "to fly, presenting one of the most subHme spec-
tacles of human ingenuity and human daring the world ever beheld.
It actually made one giddy to look at it, and filled thousands with
lively fear for the safety of individuals who were on it, and who seemed
not to run along the earth, but to fly, as it were, on the wings of the
wind. When the vehicle," he continues, "nicely poised on springs,
and covered in to exclude the external current of air created by its
motion, you might imagine you were in a state of perfect rest, while
you are flying along the surface with the speed of a racer. Then the
steam horse is not apt, like his brother of flesh and blood, to be fright-
ened from his propriety by sudden fancies which defy the prudence
and skill of the driver. Explosion, if it takes place, will not injure
the passengers, for they are in a separate vehicle, and the enginemen
may be trusted with the care of their own lives. In daylight, and with
good arrangements, travelling in the steam coach, at twenty miles
an hour, may be much more safe, as well as pleasant, than in any
ordinary stage coach at eight or nine."
The practicability of railways for the transportation of passengers,
has been proved beyond question, and, from recent experiments, no
doubt can be entertained that every description of article will be even-
tually conveyed on rails. Even now, many companies in England,
owning the most profitable canals in the Kingdom, contemplate
draining them, and laying railways on their site. Should they do so,
it will be a very strong evidence of the superiority of railways over
canals in the transportation of bulky articles. . . .
The difference in the expense of constructing railways and canals
have been variously estimated; some put it down at one half, others
at one-third, and again we have seen it estimated as nearly equal;
but, from the knowledge possessed by your committee, either derived
from actual observation or indisputable authority, they are induced
to believe that the cost of a railway is about two-thirds that of a
canal through the same route. A single railway, or one set of tracks,
with suitable turn-outs, will cost from nine to twelve thousand
, dollars. A double railway, with two complete sets of tracks, wiU
cost from 15 to 18 thousand dollars per mile. These estimates are
for well constructed lines of railways, through a favorable country,
• and do not include any extraordinary difficulty. Every road which is
' intended to pass over a large extent of country, will be more or less
i obstructed by mountains, streams, vallies, &c.,.and in all these cases,
: the divisions of the road will be subject to change accordingly. The
400 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
cost of that part of the Baltimore and Ohio railroad which has been
completed with double tracks, consisting of 6i miles, is not pre-
cisely known; but the company are of the opinion that the average
cost, to the Ohio, from the present termination, will fall but little
short of $20,000 per mile.
B. Arguments for Canals in i8jo ^
Despite what appears to have been convincing arguments to the contrary, the
friends of canals insisted that railroads were then, and would continue to be, in-
ferior to canals as routes of travel and transportation. Illustrations of their
arguments are as follows:
Railroads are a great improvement on turnpikes; but, in my
opinion, are vastly inferior (particularly as a public work, and in a
republican country) to canals, both as to convenience as well as
economy. A canal is accessible everywhere, a railroad nowhere,
(without interrupting the current of wagons,) except by an arrange-
ment for turning out; and the more turn outs are made, the greater
the casualties. By canal, every boatman may choose his own mo-
tion, within the maximum motion; by railroad, every traveller must
have the same motion, or be subject to turn outs; which, as I have
said, have their casualties. The motion of twenty and thirty miles
an hour on railroads will be fatal to wagons, road, and loading, as
well as human life.
We have a distance of eight miles from the mines, with a descent
of seventy to one hundred and twelve feet in a mile. The velocitj
of the wagons would exceed thirty miles an hour, if not checked
Our first two months' use of the road was fifteen and twenty mile?
an hour, which would have soon ruined both road and wagons
and, I am persuaded, was then dearer than the turnpike we put ou:
rails on.
Our present motion, say of six miles an hour, is very satisfactory
and makes the railroad an immensely valuable apj:)endage to ou
coal business. Wet or dry, we go on it; moist and wet weatha
which ruins turnpikes, makes the wagons run freer on the railroj
snow, however, is an impediment. Our wagons will not run down frc
the mines, by gravity, in a snow storm; the snow packs on the roi
In such weather, as well as in sleety weather, we cannot use the bri
* Documents in Relalion to the Comparative Merits of Canals and Railrt
Submitted by Mr. Howard of Maryland. (Doc. loi, Committee Report on St
Carriages, etc., 22& Congress, ist session, 337-8.)
I
INLAND COMMERCE AND IMPROVEMENTS 401
as it slips too freely to produce the necessary friction to check the
wagons.
I think it rather fortunate for society, that railroads are not of
equal value to canals, for a railroad can be taken anywhere; and,
consequently, no improvements would be safe on their line: for the
moment the improvement succeeded, it would be rivalled, so as to
destroy both, &c., whereas we know the line and limits of our canals,
by the supply of water, and graduation of the ground; so that all
improvements thereon are safe against the undermining of rivals. I
should consider, that, if the railroads superseded canals, they would,
for the above reasons, render the tenure or value of property as in-
secure as it would be if without the protection of law.
C. Canals and Railroads — Rates and Expense of Maintenance, 18 j^ ^
The controversy regarding cost of construction and the efficiency of operation
was naturally closely connected to the question of rates and expense of mainte-
nance, A committee of the New York legislature reported on these phases of the
controversy in 1835 as follows:
In regard to their relative merits as affording the means of trans-
portation, there is less difficulty in reaching an approximate ratio.
In reducing them both to a level, we attain for general purposes, a
fair standard of comparison. Taking the facts we have obtained as
a basis, we find the relative cost of conveyance is, as 4.375 to i, a
Httle over four and one- third to one, in favor of canals: this is exclusive
of tolls or profits. If the cost of construction, the annual cost for
repairs, and the amount of tonnage were the same on a canal as on a
rail-road, then the same rate of toll would produce the same rate of
profit on each. Our examinations have shown, as before stated, that
rail-roads in the average, cost more than canals, both in their con-
struction and repairs. But for comparison, we assume a case in which
they are equal, and charge the same toll. The average tolls on the
Erie canal are less than one cent per ton per mile: assuming an average
toll of one cent per ton per mile, the ratio of the entire cost of trans-
portation and toll is, as (2.5 to i,) two and a half to one, in favor of
canals. In the preceding computations, the cost of transportations
on railroads is the nett cost, as reported by rail-road companies, allow-
ing no profits on this business, while the charges on the canals is at
contract prices, which are supposed to yield a profit to the carrier.
^ Assembly Documents. (Albany, N. Y., 1835), Doc. 296, pp. 42-4.
402 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
The cost of transportation on canals, as previously stated, is the aver-
age on the Erie canal, the Delaware and Hudson canal, and the
Schuylkill canal ; on the two latter, the cost of transporting coal only
is known ; and the total average of the three canals is almost exactly
the same as the average price for the several different articles trans-
ported on the Erie canal. The preceding calculations are confined
to a velocity not much exceeding 50 or 60 miles in 24 hours. We have
not instituted any investigation to show the relative economy in high
and low velocities. For the conveyance of freight, we are of the
opinion, canals are not well adapted to any material increase of speed
beyond 3 miles per hour; and as the speed on half of the rail-roads
embraced in this computation, is from 10 to 15 miles per hour, we may
consider this comparison as nearly similar to one of high velocity
on rail-roads, and low velocity on canals. And goods that can afford
to pay the difference above indicated, for the saving of time, would
hold the two kinds of conveyance in equilibrium. The amount that
would find so great an object in the saving of time, in comparison
to the total quantity requiring transportation, it is believed would be
small. In relation to the conveyance of passengers, the saving of
time is highly important, and the rail-road becomes eminently I lie
superior method of communication. We are therefore led to ihc
conclusion, that in regard to the cost of construction and mai:
nance, and also in reference to the expense of conveyance at modci
Velocities, canals are clearly the most advantageous means of c>
munication. On the other hand, where high velocities are requii\ 1.
as for the conveyance of passengers, and under some circumstance^ oi
competition, for light goods of great value, in proportion to theii
weight, the preference would be given to a rail-road.
It may be observed in favor of rail-roads, that they admit of
vantageous use in districts where canals, for the want of water, wouu
be impracticable. This advantage often occurs in mining districts
and sometimes for general trade, where it is necessary to cross di\id
ing ridges at a level too high to obtain water for their summits.
The facts and reasonings presented, we believe clearly show, tha
both canals and rail-roads, are highly important means of internal
communication; that each has its peculiar advantages, and wil
predominate according to the character of the route, and the trad
for which it is intended to provide. . . .
INLAND COMMERCE AND IMPROVEMENTS
403
COMPARISON OF RATES OF TRANSPORTATION
Ton of 2,000 pounds
Price
per ton
per mile
Cost if
carried
200 miles
Prices of transportation during the years 1817, 1818, 1819,
by teams, from Albany to Buffalo, (usual rates, $4.25
pr cwt.,)
Rates of 1835, (including tolls,):
By Erie Canal —
For merchandize,
Flour,
Staves,
Salt,
Baltimore and Ohio Rail-Road —
Down freight,
Up "
Liverpool and Manchester Rail-Road —
For merchandize,
Hudson river, 145 miles —
Heavy goods, (from N. Y. to Albany,
10 cts. per 100 lbs.)
Light " 20 " "
Provisions, &c.,7 " "
Lake Ontario —
Merchandize, (from Oswego to Lewiston, 146 miles,
20 cts. pr 100 lbs. all kinds,)
Lake Erie —
Merchandize, (from Buffalo to Cleaveland, 190 miles,
23 cts. pr 100 lbs.) for heavy goods,
29 cts. pr 100 lbs. for light goods,
Cts. MiUs
293
7.5
1-38
2.76
0.96
2.74
2.42
3 00
Dolls. Cts.
$58 60
3-95
7
90
1.83
3
66
0.97
I
94
0.93
I
86
4.0
8
00
6.0
12
00
15 00
2 76
5 52
I 92
5 48
4 84
6 00
404 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
VIII. Progress and Development of Railroads
During the Decade, i8jo-i86o ^
The decade 1850-1860 saw rapid railroad development in the United States.
Lines already in operation were extended and new ones were laid down. In
addition the hauling capacity of the roads for both freight and passengers was
materially increased.
The decade which terminated in i860 was particularly dis-
tinguished by the progress of railroads in the United States. At its
commencement the total extent in operation was 8,588.79 miles,
costing $206,260,128; at its close, 30,598.77 miles, costing $1,134,-
452,909; the increase in mileage having been 22,004.08 miles, and
in cost of construction $838,192,781.
While the increase in mileage was nearly 300 per cent., and the
amount invested still greater, the consequences that have resulted
from these works have been augmented in vastly greater ratio. Up
to the commencement of the decade our railroads sustained only an
unimportant relation to the internal commerce of the country. Nearly
all the lines then in operation were local or isolated works, and neither
in extent nor design had begun to be formed into that vast and con-
nected system which, like a web, now covers every portion of our
wide domain, enabling each work to contribute to the traffic and value
of all, and supplying means of locomotion and a market, almost at
his own door, for nearly every citizen of the United States.
Previous to the commencement of the last decade only one line of
railroad had been completed between tide-water and the great interior
basins of the country, the products of which now perform so important
a part in our internal and foreign commerce. Even this line, formed
by the several links that now compose the New York Central road,
was restricted in the carriage of freight except on the payment of
canal tolls, in addition to other charges for transportation, whidl
restriction amounted to a virtual prohibition. The commerce result-
ing from our railroads consequently has been, with comparati\( 1\
slight exceptions, a creation of the last decade.
The line next opened, and connecting the western system of hikv
and rivers with tide- water, was that extending from Boston to Ot:
densburg, composed of distinct links, the last of which was compKi
during 1850. The third was the New York and Erie, which \n
opyened on the 22d of April, 185 1. The fourth, in geographical ordt r
was the Pennsylvania, which was completed in 1852, although it
I Pr'}i>vni,irv fi. hnri n„ I hr J'iuhili T/./v/zv , S6o. (Washington, 1862), 103 s
INLAND COMMERCE AND IMPROVEMENTS 405
mountain division was not opened till 1854. Previous to this time
its summit was overcome by a series of inclined planes, with stationary
engines, constructed by the State. The fifth great line, the Baltimore
and Ohio, was opened, in 1853, still further south. The Tennessee
river, a tributary of the Mississippi, was reached, in 1850, by the
Western and Atlantic railroad of Georgia, and the Mississippi itself,
by the Memphis and Charleston railroad, in 1859. In the extreme
north the Atlantic and St. Lawrence, now known as the Grand Trunk,
was completed early in 1853. In 1858, the Virginia system was ex-
tended to a connexion with the Memphis and Charleston and with
the Nashville and Chattanooga railroads.
The eight great works named, connecting the interior with the
seaboard, are the trunks or base lines upon which is erected the vast
system that now overspreads the whole country. They serve as
outlets to the interior for its products, which would have little or no
commercial value without improved highways, the cost of transporta-
tion over which does not equal one-tenth that over ordinary roads.
The works named, assisted by the Erie Canal, now afford ample means
for the expeditious and cheap transportation of produce seeking eastern
markets, and could, without being overtaxed, transport the entire
surplus products of the interior.
Previous to 1850 by far the greater portion of railroads constructed
were in the States bordering the Atlantic, and, as before remarked,
were for the most part isolated lines, whose limited traffics were alto-
gether local. Up to the date named, the internal commerce of the
country was conducted almost entirely through water lines, natural
and artificial, and over ordinary highways. The period of the settle-
ment of California marks really the commencement of the new era
in the physical progress of the United States. The vast quantities
of gold it produced imparted new life and activity to every portion
of the Union, particularly the western States, the people of which, at
the commencement of 1850, were thoroughly aroused as to the value
and importance of railroads. Each presented great facilities for the
construction of such works, which promised to be almost equally
productive. Enterprises were undertaken and speedily executed which
have literally converted them into a net-work of lines, and secured
their advantages to almost every farmer and producer.
. . . The only important line opened in the west, previous to
1850, was the one from Sandusky to Cincinnati, formed by the Mad
River and Little Miami roads. But these pioneer works were rude,
unsubstantial structures compared with the finished works of the pres-
4o6 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
ent day, and were employed almost wholly in the transportation of
passengers. Within the decade, in place of this one line, railroads
have been constructed radiating from lakes Erie and Michigan, strik-
ing the Mississippi at ten and the Ohio at eight different points, and
serve as trunk lines between the two great hydrographic systems of
the west. These trunk lines are cut every few miles by cross lines,
which, in the States east of the Mississippi, are sufficiently numerous
to meet every public and private want, and to afford every needful
encouragement to the development of the resources of this country.
The southern States have been behind the northern in their public
enterprises, though, at the date of the census, they were prosecuting
them with great energy and vigor. The progress inland of the great
trunk lines of the south has been already noted. The opening of the
Mobile & Ohio, and of the Mississippi Central, which will soon take
place, will give completeness to the system of the southwestern States,
and leave Uttle to be done to make it all that is wanted for that section
of the country.
West of the Mississippi less has been done, for the reason that the
settlements there are of a more recent date, and the people less able to
provide the means for their construction than those of the older States.
But even upon our western frontier extensive systems have beeni
undertaken and very considerable progress made in their execution.
A more interesting subject than the progress of our public works
would be their results, as shown in the increased commerce and wealth
of the country. But such inquiries do not come within the scope
of this report. It is well ascertained, however, that our railroads
transport in the aggregate at least 850 tons of merchandise per annum
to the mile of road in operation. Such a rate would give 26,000,00c
tons as the total annual tonnage of railroads for the whole country,
If we estimate the value of this tonnage at $150 per ton, the aggregaU
value of the whole would be $3,900,000,000. Vast as this commerc
is, more than three-quarters of it has been created since 1850.
IX; Inland Water Commerce
Development, 18 16- 18 52 ^
By the middle of the century, the lake trade had developed to large proportioi
River trafl'ic, although imjxjrtant, was being gradually displaced by that of
railroads. This movement has been described as follows:
* Report on the Trade and Commerce of the British North American Colonics
upon the Trade of the Great Lakes and Rivers. By Israel D. Andrews (Washingt
1853). 55-6, 743-^. 904-6.
INLAND COMMERCE AND IMPROVEMENTS 407
In 1816 the first steamer was built on the waters of Lake Ontario,
and the first on Lake Erie in 1818. For some considerable time the
first vessels put in commission on Lake Erie were used merely for
facilitating the movements and operations of the Indian traders,
carrying westward supplies and trinkets for the trade, and returning
with cargoes of furs and peltries. In 1825 the Erie canal was com-
pleted, and its influence began at once to be felt through the western
country. The western portion of the State of New York immedi-
ately began to assume an air of civilization and to advance in com-
mercial growth. This influence continued still to increase until the
Welland canal and the Ohio canals were completed. The tonnage,
which had then increased to about 20,000 tons, found at this time full
employment in carrying emigrants and their supplies westward, which
continued to be their principal trade till 1835, when Ohio began to
export breadstuff s and provisions to a small extent. In 1800 Ohio
had 45,000 inhabitants; in 1810, 230,760; in 1820, 581,434; in 1830,
937,903-
During this year a portion of the canals was opened, and during
the ten years next ensuing after 1830 some five hundred miles of canals
had been completed, connecting the lakes by two lines with the Ohio.
Under the influence of these improvements the population of the
State augmented to 1,519,467 individuals. In 1835 she exported by
the lakes the equivalent of 543,815 bushels of wheat. In 1840 her
exports of the same article over the same waters were equivalent to
3,800,000 bushels of wheat, being an increase, in the space of five
years, in the articles of wheat and flour, of what is equal to 3,300,000
bushels of wheat, or nearly six hundred per centum. These articles
are selected, as being the most bulky, in order to illustrate the effect
of canals upon lake commerce. At this period, 1840, there were not
completed over two hundred miles of railway in the State, and this
distance was composed of broken portions of roads, no entire route
existing as yet across the length or breadth of the State. In 1850,
there were in operation something over four hundred miles of railroad,
and rather a greater length of canals, while the population had in-
creased to 1,908,408, and her exports, by lake, of wheat and flour,
were equivalent to 5,754,075 bushels of wheat, and that, too, in spite
of the fact that the crop of 1849 was almost an absolute failure through-
out the West.
In 1 85 1 the exports of wheat and flour, by lake, were equivalent
to no less than 12,193,202 bushels of wheat; and the cost of freight
and shipping charges on this amount of produce falls little, if any,
4o8
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
short of $510,000; nearly the whole amount having reached the lakes
via the canals and railways of Ohio. . . .
The history of the rise and progress of the steam-marine of the
United States is one of the most interesting and wonderful things in
our national advancement. Although one steamboat was built at
Pittsburg as early as the year 181 1, and although eleven other boats
were built on the Ohio river and its headwaters within the next five
years, it was not until the year 181 7 that steam navigation could be
said to have been fairly introduced upon the Mississippi and its tribu-
taries. Previous to this year, there were twelve steamboats upon
these waters, having an aggregate carrying capacity of 2,235 tons.
From 1 81 7 to 1834, the number of boats increased to 230, and the
aggregate of tonnage to 39,000 tons. In 1842 there were 475 boats
on the same waters: in 185 1 this number had been increased to 601.
Official reports made to the Treasury Department in 1842, stated
in detail the steamboat tonnage on the Mississippi and its tributaries
in that year. The following- table shows the increase from 1842 to
1851.
COMPARATIVE STATEMENT
Districts
New Orleans
Saint Louis.
Cincinnati. .
Pittsburg. .
Louisville. .
Nashville. . .
Wheeling. . .
Vicksburg. . .
Memphis. . .
Total...
1842
28,153
14,725
12,025
10,107
4,618
3,810
2,595
76,033
Tonnage
:8si
34,736
31,834
24,709
16,943
15,181
3,578
7,191
938
450
135,560
Increase
6,583
17,109
12,684
6,836
10,563
4,596
938
450
59,759
Decrease
232
232
The year following the real commencement of regular steamboi
navigation on the waters of the Mississippi and its tributaries, (181^
the first steamer employed on the upper lakes was built and launcl
on Lake Erie. In 1819 the waters of Lake Huron were first ploughl
by the keel of a steamer, and in 1826 those of Lake Michigan.
1832 a steamboat first apf>eared at Chicago, and in 1833 there
INLAND COMMERCE AND IMPROVEMENTS
409
but eleven small steamers on the three lakes named. This date may
therefore be fairly taken as that of the real commencement of steam-
boat navigation on the upper lakes.
Ten years later (February, 1843) a report was made to Congress
of the number and tonnage of steamboats employed on those waters,
''from January i, 1841, to January i, 1843." Though this is a very
loose way of stating a matter of this kind, and does not give the true
amount of the steam tonnage enrolled and employed in either one of
the two years included — necessarily overstating it — yet the facts
thus presented are used for the purpose of comparing them with
those now ascertained, as showing correctly the steam tonnage of the
year which ended on the 30th June, 1851.
COMPARATIVE STATEMENT
Districts
Tonnage
i84i-'43
1851
Increase
Buffalo creek
6,773
2,813
1,855
887
2,053
25,990
5,691
6,418
1,745
16,469
1,746
652
19,217
2,878
4,563
858
I4,4i<6
1,746
652
Presque Isle
Cuyahoga
Miami
Detroit
Mackinaw
Chicago
Total
14,381
58,711
44,330
These comparative statements show that in a period of nine years
the steamboat tonnage of the Mississippi valley has nearly doubled
itself, and that in a period of eight years that of the upper lakes has
more than quadrupled itself: very significant facts touching increase
of population, production, and trade.
The average size of steamboats now running on the lakes is found
to be 437 tons; that of the steamboats of the Ohio basin 2o6|f tons;
and that of those of the lower and upper Mississippi, the Arkansas,
the Missouri, and the Illinois rivers, 273^^ . On the Mississippi and
Ohio rivers there are many steamers of from 300 to 500 tons each,
and a number from 600 to 800 each; but the large number of light-
draught boats, built to run in periods of low water on those rivers,
and in all seasons on the smaller streams emptying into them, carry
4IO
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
the general averages down to the figures given above. Several of
the passenger steamers of the lakes are of eleven hundred tons and
upwards each.
COMPARATIVE STATEMENT
Number
Tonnage
Northern lakes of the United States
164
253
348
765
Tons and gslhs.
69,165 87
67,957 84
67,601 31
Mississippi valley do
Ohio basin do.
Total for interior of the United States
204,725 12
The cost of steamboats on the lakes and rivers of the interior,
varies from eighty to ninety, and from ninety to one hundred dollars
per ton. Taking the lowest price, which is that attainable in the
Ohio basin, as the standard, we have as the original value of the
204,7 25 If tons of steam tonnage engaged in the transportation of
passengers and the carrying trade on the lakes and rivers of the United
States, for the year ending June 30, 1851, an aggregate of sixteen
million three hundred and seventy-eight thousand dollars; an amount
of capital that goes entirely out of existence, and has to be re-invested
every three and a half to four years — the period of the ''natural life"
of a steamboat on the waters of the interior.
This fact indicates very clearly the immense extent of the em-
ployment provided and of the material consumed, in keeping up the
steam tonnage of the United States to the standard required by the
travel and trade of the country. . . .
The canal commerce of the United States is prosecuted upon aboutj
3,000 miles of canal, which, excluding the coal trade, cleared and
landed an average of about 6,000 tons per mile. The New York Stati
canals averaged, in clearances and landings, about (),ooo tons per milf
but this is above the average for all the canals. At 6,000 tons per niiU'
3,000 miles give 18,000,000 tons, valued at $66 the ton, and formin.
a gross sum of $1,188,000,000.
There are also completed in this country, 13,315 miles of railwa\
but as 2,500 miles have been opened since January i, 1852, onl^
10,815 miles can be considered as having participated in the trade <»
1852. Several of the longest freight lines have received and delivcri (
an aggregate amounting to an average of 2,000 tons per mile; bu
INLAND COMMERCE AND IMPROVEMENTS
411
as many other lines do a comparatively light freighting business,
the average assumed will be 1,000 tons per mile, or a gross business
of 10,815,000 tons, which, from the general character of railway
freight, as being of a lighter and more costly character than water
freight, may be valued at $100 the ton: this would give an aggregate
of gross railway commerce amounting to $1,081,500,000.
This is undoubtedly a very unsatisfactory way of computing the
value of our domestic trade, but, until better data can be arrived at,
the fairness of this statement cannot be denied; and it is only put
forth as the nearest approximation that can be made to accuracy,
under our present system of internal trade returns, in the hope that
the startling results here obtained may arouse those interested in
this important trade to a full investigation of the subject by the col-
lection of authentic data.
It has been customary heretofore, in making up these or similar
estimates, to call the net money-value of property one-half the gross
amount. Though this process may correctly denote the number of
tons transported, it will by no means decide that the same property
has not entered and re-entered, several times, into the general
account, as it moved from point to point in search of a consumer.
For convenience, however, the following tabular statements, showing
the gross and net tons and value, are presented:
I85I
NET
GROSS
Tons
Value
Tons
Value
Lake commerce
River commerce
1,985,563
2,033,400
$157,236,729
169,751,372
3,971,126
4,066,800
$314,473,458
339,502,744
Aggregate
4,018,963
326,988,101
8,037,926
653,976,202
This commerce and its necessities have occasioned the construction
jks in the United States of nearly twenty thousand miles of magnetic
:s telegraph, at a cost of little less than $6,000,000.
Comment upon such facts as are here presented, will readily sug-
■'S\ gest themselves to the minds of all intelligent men. It will be seen
that our domestic commerce is of incalculable value to us, even as
represented by the "coasting" trade; but when to this is added the
value of our whale, cod, and mackerel fisheries, and our California
trade, that is carried on in registered bottoms, its magnitude will
412 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
be still more astonishing. The fact that our domestic exchanges
amount, by sale and resale and by the additional value gained by th<
labor bestowed in transportation, sale, &c., annually to over fivt
thousand million dollars, as the sum upon which one commission oi
profit is paid, and that in this trade is employed actively and profit-
ably over two million tons of shipping, which cost not less than om
hundred and twenty million dollars, three thousand miles of canal,
thirteen thousand miles of railway, and twenty thousand miles oi
telegraph, costing about four hundred and fifty million dollars, is one
calculated not only to astonish, but to excite admiration of the en*
industry, and enterprise which, in so short a period, have achi<
this high position.
CHAPTER XIII
FOREIGN COMMERCE, 1800-1860
I. Foreign Commerce prior to i860
A. Character and Extent of Foreign Commerce, 1 800-1860 ^
During the sixty years from 1800 to i860 the value of the export trade of the
United States increased more than sixfold, from less than $50,000,000 to almost
$300,000,000 annually. During the same period the value of the imports increased
from less than $60,000,000 to more than $300,000,000 annually. The most im-
portant articles of export were cotton, tobacco, rice, flour and provisions. Of
these exports. Great Britain took more than any other country. A view of the
commerce of this period is given by Mr. Kettell as follows:
The imports rose steadily to over $300,000,000 in 1854, under the
first Australian and Californian excitement, and took larger dimen-
sions as the railroad operations progressed. Railroad iron figures
largely in the amount in exchange for bonds. The imports of silks
rose from $13,731,000, in 1850, to $30,636,000. The most remarkable
rise in the importation was, however, in sugar, which, from $11,000,000,
rose to nearly $55,000,000, in 1857, in consequence of the failure of
the Louisiana crop, at a moment of very active demand. So high a
figure to be paid for sugar at a critical moment went far to disturb
the exchanges, and aid the panic of 1857. We find that the whole
amount of importations for the ten years reached $3,004,591,285,
exceeding, by $1,736,807,503, the importations of the previous ten
years. This excess of expenditure corresponds with the estimated
amount of capital expended for extraordinary purposes, since a con-
siderable portion of the expenditures was applied to domestic manu-
factures. The operation of the treaty with Canada produced a
somewhat larger receipt of foreign goods. These also swelled propor-
tionately the aggregate imports. The excitement manifest in the
United States in regard to gold and railroads, was also present in Eng-
land and Europe. The production of manufactured wares to send
to the gold countries, and to avail of the local demand for goods,
required more raw material, at a moment when the short harvests
and war enterprise enhanced general wants. The effect of these was
, ^ Eighty Years' Progress. By Thomas P. Kettell (Hartford, 1869), 156-9.
414
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
equivalent to a large transfer of capital to the west, not only from
Europe, but also from those eastern states that are usually buyers
of food. Thus the wheat crop of the United States in 1850, by cen-
was equal to 22,000,000 bbls. of flour. The average export price m
that year was $5, giving to the crop* a value of $110,000,000. In
1855, the average price was $10, giving a value of $1 10,000,000 greater.
This sum was taken out of the pockets of the food buyers, to the profit
of the food sellers, at the moment when the latter were enjoying so
large an expenditure for other purposes. The export value of agri-
culture rose from $24,309,210, in 1850, to $77,686,455, in 1856. The
great activity of the years ending with 1857 was, then, due to heavy
expenditure of capital at the west simultaneously with profitable
sales of its crops. ...
If we bring together by recapitulation the aggregate of the seven
decades since the formation of the government, we shall have a very
interesting synopsis of the national progress in respect of commerce,
... as follows:
EXPORTS FOR PERIODS OF TEN YEARS
Year
1800
1810
1820
1830
1840
1850
i860
Domestic
$293,634,645
383,401,077
462,701,288
536,104,918
892,889,909
1,131,458,801
2,766,799,881
$6,466,990,519
Foreign
$191,344,293
372,536,294
127,190,714
229,643,834
199,451,994
129,105,782
226,950,036
$1,476,222,947
Total
$484,968,938
755,937,371
589,892,002
765,748,752
1,092,351
1,260,564
2,993,749
$7,943,203,400
Year
Imports
Manufactures,
Annual Value
Agriculture,
Annual V'alue
1800 . .
$591,845,454
927,663,500
688,120,347
798,633,427
1 ,^02,476,084
1,267,783,782
3,004,591,285
....
1810.
1820
1830
1840
1850
i860
145,385,906
62,766,385
111,645,466
483,278,215
1,055,595,899
2,000,000,000
$621,163,97;
994,093,84s
i,9io,ooo,oot
$8,581,113,879
FOREIGN COMMERCE 415
This table, mostly official, gives the extraordinary results of a
nation's industry and commerce in a period of seventy years. The
growth has such an accumulative force, as to be very surprising. In
the item of re-exports of foreign goods, the trade never recovered
the figures they touched at the period when American vessels did the
carrying trade for fighting Europe. Latterly, however, under the
warehouse system of the United States, and the reciprocity treaty with
the British provinces, some increase in that respect has taken place,
the more so that steam and extended relations are opening to the
United States a larger share of the South American trade, tending
ultimately to give the United States the preponderating influence.
The exports of domestic goods grow rapidly under the more extended
demand for cotton throughout the world, and of which the United
States is the only source of supply. All other cotton countries, India
particularly, require more cotton in the shape of goods than they
supply in the raw state. The demand for cotton clothing increases
in the double ratio of greater numbers and greater wealth throughout
the world. Cotton is, however, not the only article which increases
in export value. The tables show us that gold has figured in ten years
for $507,000,000 as an article of export, and will probably never be
I less. The agricultural resources of this country have just begun to
be developed. Up to 1842 there was, under the restrictive systems
of Europe, comparatively no market for American farm produce. In
that year the statesmen of England recognized the fact that the
demands of EngUsh work people for food had outgrown the abiUty
of the British islands to supply it on terms as low as it could be bought
elsewhere. They therefore removed the prohibition upon the import
of cattle and provision*, and reduced the duty on grain. This opened
a market for American produce, which grew rapidly. The circum-
stances of the famine of 1846 justified the wisdom of the English gov-
ernment, and led to the entire removal of the corn duties in 1849.
That example was followed by France and her neighbors. France,
however, restored the duties in 1859. The liberal legislation of Eng-^
land, the famine, the wars, and speculations of Europe, have
gradually extended the demand for American produce, at the time
when a very broad field had been opened to supply that demand. This
we may illustrate. The area of Great Britain's industry — hills, lakes,
vales, and valleys — is 53,760,000 acres; and the population in 181 2,
when she made war on us, was 1 1 ,991 ,107. Now we find from the table
of land sales, elsewhere given, that the federal government has sold in
the last twenty years selected farm lands to the extent of 68,655,203
4i6
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
acres, and has given to railroads 42,000,000 acres more of selected
lands, making 1 10,000,000 acres that have mostly passed into the hands
of settlers. This is a surface double the whole area of Great Britain;
and the population on that area has increased, in the same time, 11,-
374,595, or a number nearly as large as that of Great Britain in 181 2.
There have been built on that area in the last ten years, and are now
in operation, 20,000 miles of railroads, crossing every part of it, and
bringing every farm within reach of a market. The speculators and
road builders, who ate up the produce of that area, during the process
of road construction, have vanished, and the whole is now offered by
a hundred channels to the best bidders of Europe. We have said that
corn is the settler's capital, and that corn, in the shape of grain, pork,
and whiskey, is the staple export of a new country. The corn prod-
uct of 1855, per state reports, was 600,000,000 bushels. The number
of hogs packed that year w^as 2,489,050, averaging 200 lbs. each, and
giving a total weight of 497,900,000 lbs. of pork. In that year the
weight of pork exported was 164,374,681 lbs. Of this amount, 58,-
526,683 lbs. went to England, or 12 per cent, of the whole production,
as the result of her more liberal poUcy of 1842.
QUANTITIES OF CORN AND PORK EXPORTED TO
GREAT BRITAIK
Pork,
barrels
Hams and
Bacon, lbs.
Lard,
lbs.
Corn,
bushels
Wheat,
bushels
Flour,
barrels
184.0. . . .
1,061
26,394
160,274
14,367,105
29,218,462
53,150,465
30,240,161
15,365,524
444,305
3,430,732
17,798,770
27,283,741
21,388,265
15,349,922
10,288,474
104,341
12,548
123,665
15,5*6,525
5,062,220
12,392,242
5,935,284
3,215,198
615,972
119,854
143,300
4,399,951
2,034,704
608,661
8,036,665
8,926,196
620,911
208,981
208,02<
2,45 7, o7'
958,74
953.81
2,026,1a
3,512,1^
1841
4,769
6,900
73,940
87,760
111,385
64,663
13,578
1842
184.7
1848
1840
18^';... .
1858
The cotton, tobacco, and rice of the south, the farm produce 0
the west, and the gold of California, each contributed an increasin,
proportion to the general exports; but manufacturers ha\'e also com
to figure largely in the general aggregate.
The following table gives the projiortions in which the generf
heads of exports have contributed from time to time to the result
since the formation of the government; and also the total exportf
including all articles.
FOREIGN COMMERCE
HEADS OF EXPORTS
417
Cotton
Tobacco
and
Rice
Flour
and
Provisions
Manu-
factures
United
States
Specie
Total of all
Domestic
Exports
1790
1803
1807
I8I6
$42,285
7,920,000
14,232,000
24,106,000
20,157,484
31,724,682
71,284,925
47,593,464
53,415,848
112,315,317
93,596,220
161,424,923
$6,103,363
8,664,000
7,783,000
15,187,880
7,143,349
6,908,655
12,607,390
11,448,142
10,848,982
11,390,148
12,182,204
23,281,186
$5,991,171
i5,oco,ooo
15,706,000
20,587,376
12,341,360
12,424,701
9,588,359
16,902,876
68,701,921
21 948,651
65,941,323
37,987,39s
$19,666,000
42,205,961
48,699,592
64,781,896
43,671,894
61,277,057
106,916,680
92,969,996
150,637,464
196,689,718
253,390,870
335,894,38s
$2,000,000
2,309,000
2,331,000
2,752,631
5,086,890
6,107,528
7,102,101
10,351,364
20,136,967
26,849,411
32,471,927
I82I
I83I
1836
1842
1847
i85t
1854
1859
$10,478,059
9,014,931
345,738
11,720,77
2,620
18,069,580
38,234,566
60,110,000
These general heads represent all parts of the Union — cotton and
tobacco in the south, flour and provisions in the west, manufactures
in the east, and gold in the Pacific States. It is difficult to see any
great difference in the prosperity which may attend each in the future.
The south is most secure in its market, holding, as it does, an abso-
lute monopoly of a raw material, which is indispensable to the indus-
try of 5,000,000 people at home and abroad, without which $500,000,-
000 employed in manufactures would be valueless, and without
which a large portion of the clothing of civiHzed men would fall short.
The peril of this position to manufacturers, operatives, and mer-
chants is apparent to statesmen, and the utmost efforts are vainly
made to find a remedy. The greater the exertion used, the more
dependent are the manufacturers on the south. India was long the
hope of England, but there are 120,000,000 persons in India whose
scanty hand-spun clothing is composed of cotton. Every effort to
improve their condition, and to induce a larger culture of cotton,
has but one result — viz. : to create a larger demand for cotton ma-
chine clothing from them; and the dependence upon the United
States is the greater. The import of cotton from India has been the
cry for thirty years. What is the result? Enghsh official returns
give the following figures for 1859: —
lbs.
Import of raw cotton from India, 1859 192,330,880
Export of cotton goods to India, 1859 193,603,270
Excess of cotton sent to India 1,272,390
4iS READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
The field for the extension of the machine goods in China and,
India is limited only by the means of the people to buy. The more
those means are increased, the greater is the demand for the raw ma-
terial; and the value of cotton rises annually on that basis. The
productions of the west are more exposed to rivalry than those of
the south; but since the formation of the present government, Eng-
land and western Europe, from being large food exporters, have come,
by the growth of manufactures, to be large food importers, and their
supplies are drawn more steadily from eastern Europe. Those re-
sources are coming to be narrowed, for the same reason. The United
States, on the other hand, with their immense plains and growing
mean of communication, are assuming a more regular position as a
source of suj^ply, which will annually swell the exports. The column
of manufactures is a gratifying evidence that the colonial position is
at last overcome; that the requisite skill and capital for manufacturing
against all rivalry are at last acquired, and that American industry
now finds sale in the markets of the world. The South American
countries offer the legitimate opening for that sale. The gold of
CaUfornia is always a merchantable commodity, and must sell under
all circumstances. . . .
B. Commerce and Legislation, 1806-18^4^
The foreign commerce of any country depends largely on the encouragement
it receives at the hands of the lawmakers both in its own and in foreign countries.
Thus the hostile legislation of Great Britain by Orders in Council and of Napoleon
by his Decrees, tended to decrease the commerce of the United States early in the
century. On the other hand, commercial treaties entered into by this country
with foreign nations stimulated the growth of the commerce ^nd trade of the
United States.
On the conquest of Prussia, in 1806, Bonaparte conceived the
idea of crushing the maritime power of Britain, by prohibiting all the
world, in his famous Berlin Decree, from conducting any trade with
her or her numerous dependencies. The retaliatory British Orders
in Council followed at once, and all countries in the world connected
in any way with France, or opposed to England, were declared to be
under precisely the same restraints as if actually invested in strict
blockade by British forces. Incensed by so unexpected and ruinous
a measure, Napoleon issued the memorable Milan Decree, making
' An Historical and Statistical AccoutU of the Foreign Commerce of the United
States. By J. Smith Homans (New York, 1857), 61-3.
FOREIGN COMMERCE
419.
lawful prize of all vessels submitting at any time or in any way to
British search or taxation. It was natural that these illegal and un-
authorized proceedings should excite the utmost interest and concern
of the United States so materially and even vitally affected by them.
We protested in vain. The administration recommended as the sole
remaining alternative of peace an embargo, which Congress adopted
in 1807. This measure the commercial interests warmly opposed as
ruinous to them, and memorials were forwarded from many quarters
praying for its repeal. To these it was replied by government, "The
embargo, by teaching foreign nations the value of American commerce
and productions, will inspire them with a disposition to practice jus-
tice. They depend upon this country for articles of first necessity,
and for raw materials to supply their manufactures." Such a view
of the matter, however, did not occur to the mind of Napoleon, who
regarded the embargo as greatly favorable to France, and aiding him
in his warfare against English commerce. "To submit," said he to
Mr. Livingston, "to pay England the tribute she demands, would be
for America to aid her against him, and a just ground of war."
In 1809, a non-intercourse with Britain and France was substi-
tuted for the embargo, which the latter power regarded as such an
evidence of hostility as to justify her in proceeding at once to con-
demn millions of American property as lawful prize.
The Congress of 18 10 determined upon the admission of the com-
mercial vessels of the powers above-named, if the act were preceded
by a revocation of their hostile and arrogant decrees. The French
government pretended to close in at once with the proposal, but it
was nearly one year later before her repeahng ordinance was officially
promulgated, evidencing a disposition on the part of Napoleon to play
with us in bad faith, and to turn the game at any time to his advan-
tage — so humiUating to our pride are the events of this entire era.
With England it was long doubtful what relationship we might expect
to sustain. Hostile and peaceable alternately, according to her ca-
prices or her interests, she had provoked in American minds a resent-
ment too deep to be subdued, and forbearance longer was regarded a
crime. The Orders of Council remaining in force, and the aggres-
sions increasing daily, a non-intercourse act of sixty days was resorted
to, the prelude only to a solemn declaration of war. Then was the
hour of severe retribution, and then was the national honor and dig-
nity of America triumphantly vindicated! ' M / / / I I /
Commerce of the United States since 181 2. — 'this lias teen an era
of prosperity and rapid advance, and the great powers of the civilized
420 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
world seem to have realized for once the rich benefits of a prolon^z^
armistice, or, if another expression be preferred, a protracted, and \\r
hope permanent peace. In commercial rank, the United States oi
America, subordinate to Britain only, and having outstripped all thr
world else, is prepared to share a divided scepter, until that scepter
can be wielded alone bj^her hand, and the empire of the seas be trans-
ferred to her keeping. /
. . . The period [i8i 2-1854] has been celebrated by an approach
to a more liberal internationality, and a reciprocity something else
than in name. The progress in the last ten years has been most
strongly marked toward that ultimatum^ in the minds of every lover
of truth and human advancement, perceived first by Lord Bacon,
and ably, though imperfectly, presented by his followers: commerce
unfettered as the winds that waft it; free religion, free government,
free press, free traffic — freedom everjrwhere, and in every righteous
thing throughout all the w^orld! When shall nations sacrifice their
foolish jealousies, and meet each other on this high, broad, and Chris-
tian ground? We are no partisan here, but a cosmopoHte. We
advocate a policy as wide as the earth, and as generous. No single
nation can afford to act alone; the movement, if made at all, must
be universal.
The condition of Europe now, however, argues little for the early
triumph of those principles to which we have been referring. The
latest British, French, and Austrian tariffs have been less restrictive,
and in the case of the first-named nation her policy would appear
about to be radically changed. The German States maintain the
exclusive policy, as do also the Spaniards and Portuguese. Russia
was the latest in adopting the restrictive system, but we see by her
last tariff some evidences of improvement, which neither Sweden nor
Denmark furnishes. The duties of the Italian States have been gen-
erally moderate, except for Rome and Naples, and we recognize a
great improvement in these in the tariff of his Holiness the Pope.
The commercial system of Holland is the most liberal in all Europe,
but the South American States appear to be governed by the same
spirit as that which dictated the policy of Spain.
In 1824, Great Britain seemed desirous of removing in som6 degree
her restriction upon the navigation of other powers. She entered
into reciprocity treaties with many of them, and in this was soon
after imitated by the United States, in the treaties of 1825-6-8-9
with Central America, Denmark, Sweden, Hanse Towns, Prussia,
Brazil, Austria, Hungary and Bohemia, Mexico, Russia, Venezuela,
FOREIGN COMMERCE
421
Greece, Sardinia, Netherlands, Hanover, and Portugal. We also
entered into similar but limited reciprocity treaties with France in
1822, continued afterward, and with England in 1821, 1825, and 1833,
and a full reciprocity treaty with Canada in 1854. These treaties were
arranged by Mr. Kennedy, chairman of the Committee of Commerce,
into three classes.
1. Those securing mutual privileges of export and import of
produce, the growth, produce, or manufacture of the stipulating pow-
ers, transported in their own vessels, without discrimination on
tonnage.
2. Those providing for a levy of duties not less favorable upon
the tonnage of either than are levied upon the tonnage of other
powers.
3. Those requiring equality of port charges. . . .
II. Foreign Commerce of the North and South Compared
A. Predominance of the South in the Export Trade, i8oo-i8jo ^
The value of agricultural exports from the two sections of the country from
1800 to 1850 were as follows:
Statement in millions of dollars, of the value of the produce of the
Southern slave States (those below the 35 th degree of latitude) and
the value of the produce of the free States and of the Northern slave
States, exported annually on an average from the United States, dur-
ing the undermentioned years, and the amount to each person.
1800 to 1807
1820 to 1824
1830 to 1833
1835 to 1840
'1841 to 1842
1844 to 1846
1849 to 1850
Southern Slave States.
Free States & N, Slave States
$9
millions,
$16 to each.
$30
millions,
$6 to each.
2Sh
<(
19
23i
2f "
33
"
17
30^
2f "
66
<(
26
36
2| "
53
<<
19 "
45
3
5ii
<<
17
48^
3
7if
<<
18
6ii
3i "
What a flattering prospect for the future, the foregoing tables
present to the producers of flour, wheat, Indian corn, tobacco, lumber,
^ Essays on the Progress of Nations.
390-1.
By Ezra C. Seaman (New York, 1852),
422 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
pork, beef, butter, cheese, and other provisions, in case they depend
upon foreign markets for the sale of their products, to enable them
to pay for, and clothe themselves with, British and French goods.
It should be borne in mind also, that more than half of the exports .
of the free States, are to the West Indies, Brazil and other parts of
South America, to pay for sugar, coffee, spices, tropical fruits and
hides. The West Indies and Brazil, furnish a constant and regular,
demand and steady markets for the products of the free and northern
slave states, while the markets of Europe are very uncertain, and not
to be depended upon. The whole commerce of the United States
with the West India Islands, and with the American continent and all
its islands, is advantageous, the balance of trade being slightly in
favor of our country, which is paid in coin, amounting on an average
to four or five millions a year, the greater part of which is exported
to the old world, to pay the balance of trade against us.
The products of the free and northern Slave States exported to the
West Indies, and to the American Continent and its islands, amountec
in 1844 to over twenty- three millions of dollars, and in 1850 to about
twenty-eight millions of dollars; in payment for which we receivec
some coin, and many articles of prime necessity, some of which can-
not be produced in the United States, and others cannot be producec
in sufficient quantities, for the consumption of the country.
The imports into the United States from the old world, which
were retained for consumption (consisting mostly of manufactured
products) cost in 1844, about seventy millions of dollars, and in 1850
about one hundred and thirty millions, about five sixths of which were
consumed in the free and the northern slave states, while the domestic
products of those states, taken by the old world in payment, amounted
to only about twenty-eight millions of dollars in 1844, and thirty
millions in 1850. It is easy to see that such a commerce is very dis-
advantageous to the northern states, as it makes them not only depen-
dent upon, and tributary to the manufacturing nations of Europe,
and involves them in debt, but it also makes them dependent upon,
and tributary to the cotton planting states of the south, for cotton
as an article of export, to pay their debts to foreign manufacturers.
B. Small Import Trade of the South in 1855 *
Although the south furnished the most imixjrtant articles of export, that sectioi
imported little directly from foreign nations. The money received for (<»fton
> Thirty Years' Virw. Tiy Thomas \\. Benton (New York, l854-^ I
FOREIGN COMMERCE 423
tobacco, and other crops was largely spent in the north for domestic manufactures
or for foreign goods brought through northern ports. Senator Benton's views on
the subject were as follows:
It [a convention called by the southern states] met at Augusta,
Georgia, and afterwards at Charleston, South Carolina; and the evil
complained of and the remedy proposed were strongly set forth in the
proceedings of the body, and in addresses to the people of the Southern
and Southwestern States. The changed relative condition of the two
sections of the country, before and since the Union, was shown in their
general relative depression or prosperity since that event, and espe-
cially in the reversed condition of their respective foreign import trade.
In the colonial condition the comparison was wholly in favor of the
South; under the Union wholly against it. Thus, in the year 1760
— only sixteen years before the Declaration of Independence — the
foreign imports into Virginia were 850,000 sterling, and into South
Carolina 555,000; while into New York they were only 189,000, into
Pennsylvania 490,000; and into all the New England Colonies col-
lectively only 561,000.
These figures exhibit an immense superiority of commercial pros-
perity on the side of the South in its colonial state, sadly contrasting
with another set of figures exhibited by the convention to show its
relative condition within a few years after the Union. Thus, in the
year 1821, the imports into New York had risen to $23,000,000 —
being about seventy times its colonial import at about an equal period
before the adoption of the constitution; and those of South Carolina
stood at $3,000,000 — which, for all practical purposes, may be con-
sidered the same that they were in 1760. . . .
The conventions of August and Charleston proposed their remedy
for the Southern depression, and the comparative decay of which they
complained. It was a fair and patriotic remedy — that of becoming
their own exporters, and opening a direct trade in their own staples
between Southern and foreign ports. It was recommended — at-
tempted — failed. Superior advantages of navigation in the North —
greater aptitude of its people for commerce — established course of
business — accumulated capital — continued unequal legislation in
Congress; and increasing expenditures of the government, chiefly
disbursed in the North, and defect of seamen in the South (for mari-
ners cannot be made of slaves) , all combined to retain the foreign trade
in the channel which had absorbed it; and the still faster increasing
extravagance and profusion of the government. And now, at this
period (1855), the foreign imports at New York are $195,000,000; at
424 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
Boston, $58,000,000; in Virginia $1,250,000; in South Carolina
$1,750,000. . . .
III. Movement of Foreign Commerce
f Balance of Trade, 1821-1850^
In any consideration of foreign commerce the subject of balance of trade is
important. When a country imports more goods than it exports the balance of
trade for that country is said to be unfavorable. Any country having an excess of
exports over imports, is said to have a favorable balance of trade. For various
reasons the foreign trade of the United States before i860 was unfavorable. The
total value of this balance and the manner in which it was provided for have been
described as follows:
Let us now compare our exports and imports, in order to learn the
amount of our foreign debt, the balance of trade, and situation of the
country at different periods; and to ascertain the effect of our severa
tariff acts, upon the prosperity of the country.
Owing to the embargo which was passed by Congress, December
2 2d, 1807, the various non-importation, and non-intercourse acts
which followed in quick succession, and the war from June, 181 2, to
January, 181 5, our imports were not very large, and the foreign debt'
of our merchants could not have been very heavy at the close of the
war. Though our national debt at the close of the war was over an
hundred and twenty millions of dollars, yet it was mostly owing to
our own citizens and to our banking institutions; and the whole
amount of debt due from our citizens and our government to Euro-
peans, did not perhaps exceed thirty millions of dollars. But our
duties on imports were so low, that immediately after the war, and
during the years 181 5, 1 816, and 181 7, our country was Uterally flooded
with British, French, and other foreign manufactures, including
cotton and woolen cloths, silks, linens, hats, boots, shoes, iron, and
hardware, &c., &c., amounting in all during those three years, {i
estimated in the Commercial Dictionary,) to the sum of $359,394,274;
while our exports during the same period amounted to only $222,-
149,774. If we add 25 per cent, to our exports for freight and profits
of American merchants and ship owners, they would amount to about
$278,000,000, and leave a balance of trade against us during th(
three years, amounting to the enormous sum of $81,000,000. Our ex«
* Essays on the Progress of Nations. By Ezn, Q, Seaman (New York, i85a)i
392-5-
FOREIGN COMMERCE
4^5
ports in 1818, 1819, and 1820, amounted to $232,115,323; our imports
during that period are estimated at $283,325,000; and if we add 20
per cent, to our exports for freight and profits, and call our foreign
debt at the close of the war $30,000,000, calculating interest upon
it, our aggregate foreign debt, including American stocks held by-
Europeans, would amount on the 30th day of September, 1820, to
about $126,000,000; perhaps sixteen millions of it was lost by the
failure and bankruptcy of American merchants and importers; leav-
ing $110,000,000, which has been paid.
All the money and products sent abroad to pay the interest on our «
foreign debt, and the dividends on our stocks held abroad, appear as
part of our exports; and the proceeds of all loans, and moneys and
effects sent here to be invested in our stocks, appear in and as a part
of our imports. Foreign debt, including the amount of our stocks
held by Europeans on the first day of October, 1820, exclusive
of sixteen million dollars due from bankrupts, estimated at
$110,000,000.
Statement in millions of dollars, of the value of imports into the
United States during the undermentioned fiscal years of coin and
bullion, other free goods, dutiable goods, and the amount of duties
collected during each period.
Years
1821 to 1824.
1825 to 1828,
1829 to 1832.
1833 to 1834.
1.835 to 1837.
1838
1839
1840 to 1842,
1843 to 1846,
1847
1848 to 1850,
Coin
and
Bullion,
Millions
$24.9
28.7
23-7
25
37
17.7
5-6
17.9
36
24.1
17.6
Free
Goods,
Millions
$13
19
23
75
202
43
70
135
71
17
50
Dutiable
Goods
$265
301 5
297.4
133-8
241.6
52.9
85.6
181. 4
304.8
105 -5
413-2
Total
Im-
ported
$303 -9
349-3
349-6
234.6
480.9
II3-7
162
335-2
412
147.2
481
Duties
Collected,
Millions
$90
115
124
43
74
19
25
51
97
23
99
The tariff act of 1832 exempted from duty all teas imported in
American vessels from China and other places beyond the Cape of
Good Hope, coffee, spices, fruits, nuts, gums, dyewoods, and nearly
all other raw products of the torrid zone, except sugar, and reduced
426 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
the duties on manufactures of silk, to a rate of from five to ten
per cent.
The compromise act of 1833 provided for a prospective periodical
reduction of duties until they should be reduced after the 30th of
June, 1842, to 20 per cent., added greatly to the free Hst, and
exempted from duty nearly all the manufactures of silk, worsted,
silk and worsted, linen, and laces imported from Europe after the
year 1833.
Under these acts the value of the goods imported free of duty,
increased immensely, as shown by the foregoing table. The manu-
facturers of silk worsted, silk and worsted, linen, laces, and sheeting,
imported free of duty in 1839, were valued at over thirty-six million ^
dollars. These heavy imports of articles of luxury contributed to
increase the balance of trade against the country, and to involve it
in debt.
The imports into the United States in 1841 exclusive of specie
were valued at $122,957,544; in 1842 they amounted to only $96,-
075,071. Perhaps nothing but embarrassments, inability to pay
promptly our foreign debts, and the interest upon them, and the low
state of American credit abroad, prevented the imports in 1842 from
amounting to as much as they did in 1839 and 1841. About two
thirds in value of the imports then consisted, and now consist, of
manufactured products and metals, the greatest part of which might
and ought to be produced in the United States. The effect of the
tariff of 1842 was to lessen, by means of increased duties, the importa-
tion of articles of luxury, such as silks, satins, laces, wines, and dis-
tilled spirits, as well as iron, hardware, and manufactures of cotton,
wool, worsted, and linen. It contributed to promote the interest
of the country in several modes, ist. By increasing domestic in-
dustry. 2d. By turning the balance of trade in favor of the country
and contributing to relieve it from foreign debts and embarrassments.
3d. By increasing the revenue, and 4th by checking luxury. The
compromise act of 1833 produced opposite effects in the long run, in all
these particulars, and contributed to paralyze the industry of the
country, and to impoverish it. Such are the effects also of the tariff
of 1846, and the longer it is continued in force the more plainly they
will be developed.
FOREIGN COMMERCE 427
IV. Ocean Steam Navigation
Development between 18 18 and 1840^
The most important event in ocean navigation during the nineteenth century
was the apphcation of steam as a motive power. As a consequence the carrying
capacity for freight and the comforts of travel were increased.
No peaceful event of modem times has excited a greater interest
in this country and Europe, than the establishment of regular steam
communication between the opposite shores of the Atlantic. The
experiment, at first denounced as visionary, and which one of the
greatest mechanical philosophers of England, even within the last
four years, demonstrated to be impossible, has been fairly and fully-
tried, and its success is no longer a question of doubt anywhere.
That trstekless waste of waters, which, by the populous eastern world,
during the first fifteen hundred years of the Christian era, was regarded
as illimitable, or as leading only to "that bourne from whence no
traveller returilfe," has become the grand highway of nations. The
distance which Columbus, in his first voyage, was seventy days in
accompUshing; from Palos to San Salvador, and which the Plymouth
pilgrims, one liundred and twenty years after him, were sixty-five
days in traversing from Plymouth to Cape Cod, is now accomplished
in less than tliirteen days! The energy and skill of our countrymen
had carried the science of ship-building to the highest perfection;
and it may tJe doubted whether greater safety, speed, beauty, and
accommodation can be devised by human ingenuity, than are com-
bined in the splendid lines of packet-ships, which ply between New
York and Liverpool, and London and New York. But, upon a calcu-
lation of ten years, the average passage of sailing-vessels from Liver-
pool to New York, is found to be thirty-six days, and from New York
to Liverpool, twenty-four. The average passage of the packets
during 1839, was less, the outward being only twenty-two and a half
days, and the homeward passage thirty-three days and seventeen
hours. The shortest outward was made in eighteen days and the
shortest return passage in twenty- two. The establishment of the
two great lines of steamships which now ply between London, Liver-
pool, Bristol, and New York, and between Liverpool and Boston,
via Halifax, reduces the passage across the Atlantic, to an average
of about thirteen days!
^ Huni's Merchants^ Magazine (New York, 1840), III, 296-9, 304.
428 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
A new era has indeed commenced. Enterprise and skill, called
into active being by the wealth of Great Britain, have brought distant
nations into neighborhood, opened new sources of prosperity, and
added new ties to those bonds of national friendship and commercial
interest, which have hitherto existed between this and the father-
land. Events of such importance are entitled to something more
than a mere passing commentary.
While it is conceded that the British have been the first to demon-
strate the superior safety of their steamers on the sea, the Americans
were the first to accomplish the passage of the Atlantic by steam
power. Fulton, at his death, left unfinished a steam-vessel, intended
for St. Petersburgh, where the Russian government had offered him
and his associates high privileges, in case of its arrival before a
certain period. The vessel was finished and fitted for sea, but from
some unforeseen cause, the enterprise was suddenly abandoned.
Other parties, however, took it up, and on the twenty-second of Au-
gust, 1818, the steamship Savannah was launched at New York. She
was built by Francis Fickett, under the superintendence of Captain
Moses Rogers, could carry no more than seventy-five tons of coal,
and a small quantity of wood, and was therefore fitted not only with
an engine, but with masts and sails, with the design only to make
use of the engine on her European passage, when the wind prevented
her laying her course. Having completed his vessel. Captain Rogers
proceeded to Savannah, in May, 1819, and on the 25th of that month
sailed for Liverpool, where he came to anchor on the 20th of June,
in 26 days from Savannah. From Liverpool, on the 23d of July,
the Savannah proceeded around Scotland to the Baltic, then up that
sea for St. Petersburgh, and on the 9th of September, moored off
Cronstadt. She left Cronstadt on the 6th of October, and on the
30th of November, anchored off Savannah, having, on her return
voyage, stopped four days at Arendall, in Norway. During the
whole of this period, she met with no accident, except the loss of a
small boat and anchors. She made two voyages to Europe. At
Stockholm, she was visited by Bernadotte, king of Sweden, who pre-
sented Captain Rogers with a "stone and muUer," as a token of
his gratification at the success of the enterprise. At St. Peters-
burgh, Captain Rogers received from the Emperor Alexander a
present of a silver tea-kettle, as a token of his gratification at the
first attempt to cross the Atlantic by steam. At Constantinople,
Captain Rogers also received com[)limentary presents from the
Sultan.
FOREIGN COMMERCE
429
During the year 1819, a vessel, rigged as a ship, and provided with
an engine, was built at New York, for the purpose of plying as a packet
between New York and Charleston, Cuba and New Orleans. The
experiment, so far as speed and safety were concerned, was entirely
successful, but failing to pay expenses, was of necessity abandoned.
The idea of establishing a regular steam communication between
New York and Liverpool had now come to be seriously entertained
by some of the sagacious and enterprising, on both sides of the
Atlantic. The voyages of the British steamer Enterprise, in 1825,
to the East Indies, by means similar to those used by the Savannah,
seems to have settled the question in the minds of the EngHsh public,
as to the superiority of ocean steam navigation, provided ships could
he so constructed as to carry a sufficient quantity of fuel. . . .
We do not feel called upon here to discuss the question, whether
the " Great Western Steamship Company," or the " British and Ameri-
can Steam Navigation Company," are entitled to the credit — and an
honorable distinction it certainly is — of leading the way in this great
enterprise. . . . The Bristol company were indeed first upon the line
with their noble ship, the Great Western; but the London and New
York company were actually first to accomplish the passage through
by steam with the Sirius, chartered for the express purpose. To the
unwearied perseverance of Mr. Junius Smith, an opulent and dis-
tinguished American merchant in London, more than to any other
individual, is the final and successful accomplishment of this great
enterprise doubtless to be attributed. From January, 1833, to the
present moment, he has been enthusiastically devoted to the object.
As early as June, 1835, he published his first prospectus of a line of
steam packets between England and America. The public were at
first disposed to ridicule the project. Nothing daunted, he perse-
vered, and in November following, issued a second prospectus, which
began to attract the attention of capitahsts. Shares were subscribed,
doubt yielded to demonstration, the requisite capital was soon pro-
vided, and the "British and American Steam Navigation Company"
was organized on a solid foundation. |Jn October, 1836, they made
their contract for building their first steamship; the keel was laid on
the ist of April, 183 7, 'but owing to the failure of one of the contractors,
and other difficulties, she was not laundied until the. 24th of May,
1838, when she received the name of Ife British Queen. She left
Portsmouth on the 12th of July, 1839, «»^||f first trip ^LNew York,
and arrived at New York on the 27th;, after a passaget)f fourteen
days and eighteen hours.
430 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
No sooner did the fact of the establishment of the British and
American company transpire, than the people of Bristol became
aroused to the importance of securing to their ancient city the advan-
tages of a steam communication with New York. Mr. Brunei, the
celebrated engineer, and other gentlemen connected with the great
western railway, came forward with liberal subscriptions. A commit-
tee was appointed, assisted by one of the most competent practical
ship-builders of the kingdom, to make the necessary surveys and
examination. Their report was made to the subscribers on the
ist of January, 1836, and on the 2d of June, 1836, the "Great West-
ern Steamship Company" was estabUshed by deed of settlement.
On the 28th of July following, the stern-post of the Great Western
was raised, and on the 19th of July, 1837, she was launched. Aft^r
testing the working of her machinery, she departed from Bristol on the
8th of April, 1838, for New York, arriving at this port 23d of April, after
a passage of fourteen days, twelve hours. She had made fifteen trips
across the Atlantic before the British Queen was placed upon the line.
The " Trans- Atlantic Steamship Company," formed at Liverpool,
in the summer of 1838, put two steamers on the route between that
port and New York. The Royal William sailed on the 5th of July,
and arrived the 24th, making a passage of eighteen days, twelve
hours. The Liverpool sailed on the 6th of November, and arrived
the 23d, making the passage in sixteen days, twelve hours. The
Royal William was withdrawn from the route in the winter of 1838,
and the Liverpool in 1839.
Public attention in London and in New England was soon directed
to the establishment of a line of steamers to ply between Boston and
Liverpool; and in 1839, Mr. Samuel Cunard, a citizen of London,
succeeded in effecting a contract with the British government, for the
transmission of her majesty's North American mails, twice a month
from Liverpool, via Halifax to Quebec. The liberal sum of £60,000
per annum for seven years, is to be paid by the government for this
service. Four steamships are to be placed on this line — two of
which, the Britannia and Acadia, have already made their appear-
ance. The citizens of Boston have aided the enter|)rise with a spirit
and liberality honorable to their character, and with a keen percefH
tion of its importance to their flourishing city. The Unicorn, the
first steamship from Old England to New England, arrived at Boston
on the 3d of June. She did not belong to the line, and her voyage
was experimental. She made the passage in seventeen days from
Liverpool to Boston. The Britannia, the first of the regular line^
FOREIGN tOMMERCE 431
arrived at Boston on the i8th of July, in fourteen days from Liverpool;
and the Acadia, which left Liverpool the 4th of August, arrived at
Boston on the 17th, making the passage in twelve days, twelve hours —
being the shortest ever made from England to the United States.
On the same day when the Acadia arrived at Boston, the President
came up the harbor of New York. The day was fine, and the spec-
tacle one rarely ever excelled. This magnificent steamship — the
largest in the world — belongs to the British and American Steam
Navigation Company, and is to ply alternately with the British Queen,
in the same line. The President was launched on the Thames, on
the 9th of December last, and in the perfection of her model, style
of architecture, and beauty of finish, is unequalled perhaps by any
other ship that floats upon the deep. . . .
The effects on the commerce and prosperity of the United States,
which must follow the establishment of these lines of steam-packets,
cannot fail to be important. The certainty and despatch with which
their voyages are performed, will turn an immense amount of busi-
ness into new channels, and multitudes, who have hitherto trans-
acted their business abroad, through agencies and correspondents,
will now cross and re-cross the Atlantic, as many times a year, per-
chance, with as little deliberation, as formerly attended their journeys
from Maine to New York, or from New York to New Orleans. As an
illustration of the advantages offered, not only to the city, but the
interior and remote sections of country, connected by railways and
river-steamers with the commercial marts, the fact may be stated,
that a person at Chicago, in Illinois, 1200 miles from New York,
may, by means of existing steam accommodations, actually reach
Liverpool or London, in nineteen days from Chicago! The Journal
of Commerce recently furnished another illustration of the advan-
tages to be derived from the increased facihty of communication,
and despatch of merchandise. An order was sent from New York
to England on the first of July. The goods were bought in London,
sent to Bristol by land, reached here, were sold, and the proceeds
remitted back by the Great Western, and would probably be in
London about September ist. So these three crossings of the At-
lantic, with the transaction of the business, and eleven days lost by
delays in waiting for the steamers to start, will all consume but two
months. It is probable that letters sent from Liverpool by the Acadia
will receive answers by the Great Western in just about twenty-five
days. Money employed in the traffic between Europe and America
can now perform about four times as many operations as it could
432 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
two years ago. The profits on each operation may be reduced, but
there will be greater certainty and stability in the markets. . . .
V. The Carrying Trade
The Use of American and Foreign Vessels, 1 821-1860 ^
Prior to the Civil War, more than a half of the foreign commerce of the United
States was carried in American vessels. If this commerce be measured in dollars,
it is found that the percentage of it carried in American vessels varied from 92.5
in 1826 to 66.5 in i860. The extent of this foreign commerce and its gradual
shifting from American to foreign vessels may be seen in yet another way. In
1825 but 9 per cent of the tonnage of vessels entering and clearing in the foreign
trade of this country was foreign, while in 1850 it was 40 per cent.
I. FOREIGN CARRYING TRADE OF THE UNITED STATES, 1821-1860.
Per Cent
Year
In American Vessels
In Foreign Vessels
Carried in
American Vessels
1821
$113,201,462
$ 14,358,235
88.7
1825
180,702,261
15,173,202
92
3
1830
129,918,458
14,447,970
89
9
^^35
229,424,056
42,165,263
84
5
1840
198,424,609
40,802,856
82
9
1845
189,380,923
42,520,247
81
7
1850
239,272,084
90,764,954
72
5
i8SS
405,485,462
131,139,904
75
6
i860
507,247,757
255,040,793
66.5
2. TONNAGE OF AMERICAN AND FOREIGN VESSELS ENTERED
AND CLEARED IN THE FOREIGN TRADE OF THE UNITED
STATES, 1821-1860.
Year
American Per Cent
Foreign Per Cent.
1821
1,570,045
90
164,604
10
1825
I, '841, 1 20
91
188,007
9
1830
1,938,987
88
265,336
12
183s
2,753,270
68
1,280,134
32
1840
3,223,955
69
1,418,849
31
1845
4,089,463
69
1,840,838
31
1850
5,205,804
60
3,503,837
40
1855
7,930,373
65
4,194,270
35
i860
12,087,209
71
4,977,916
29
> Annual Report of the Commissioner of Navigation, igi2 (Washington, 191a),
I93-S-
FOREIGN COMMERCE 433
VI. The Foreign Commerce of Important Ports
A. Foreign Commerce of the City of New York in 18 jg ^
Of all the American ports in i860, New York was the most important. The
extent of the trade of that city is shown by the following:
The year 1859 has been marked by no extraordinary events of a
commercial character. The country appears to be recovering from
the revulsion of the year 1857, and the long series of disasters and
losses which followed. The business of the port of New- York for
the year shows a favorable reaction from the extreme dullness of the
year 1858. Its foreign exports having reached one hundred and
thirty-seven millions in the year 1859, against eighty-five millions
for the preceding year; and the importations have increased in a
similar ratio; the general results for the year, when compared with
1857 and 1858, being as follows:
New-York City 1857 1858 1859
Total exports $117,723,332 $ 85,639,653 $137,696,187
Total imports 229,640,087 152,799,388 244,341,542
Total customs revenue 35,639,075 26,476,727 38,834,212
Thus, the exports of 1859 exceeded those of 1858, sixty- two per
cent., and the imports likewise increased over sixty- two and a half
per cent.; the custom-house revenue increasing in nearly the same
ratio.
We have not the full returns of the commerce of the United States
for the same periods, but from the official reports for the fiscal years
ending June 30, 1857, 1858 and 1859, it would appear that the foreign
imports of New- York are about two- thirds of the whole; and the
exports about one- third of the whole.
The relative importance of the foreign commerce of New-
York, and all other ports of the United States, is shown in the
annexed summary of imports for the years 1821, 1831, 1841 and
1851:
^ Annual Report of the Chamber of Commerce for the Year 1859-60 (New York,
i860), 1-2.
434
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
Imports and Exports of tlw State of Nrw-Vork, compared with those of tJie United
Staies'for the separate years, 182 1, 1831, 1841 and 1851.
Year
Imports of
New- York
Other Ports
Total United
States
Percent.
of N. Y.
1821
1831
1841
185 1
$ 23,629,000
57,077,000
75,713,000
141,546,000
$38,956,000
46,114,000
52,233,000
74,678,000
$ 62,585,000
103,191,000
127,946,000
216,224,000
37-75
55-31
59.18
65.46
The growth of New- York, as the importing point, is further illus-
trated by the annexed summary:
Imports
Year
State of N. Y.
Other Ports
Total
United States
Per Cent.
1855-1856
1856-1857
1857-1858
1858-1859
$210,160,454
236,493,485
178,475,736
229,181,349
$104,479,468
124,396,656
104,137,414
109,586,781
$314,639,922
360,890,141
282,613,150
338,768,130
66.79
65-53
63-15
67.65
Four years . .
Average ....
$854,311,024
213,577,756
$442,600,319
110,650,079
$1,296,911,343
324,227,835
65.90
Exports
Year
State of N. Y.
Other Ports
United States
Per Cent.
1855-1856
1856-1857
1857-1858
1858-1859
1119,111,500
134,803,298
108,340,924
117,539,825
$207,853,408
228,157,384
216,303,496
239,249,637
$326,964,908
362,960,682
324,644,420
356,789,462
36.43
37.14
33-37
32.94
Four >'ears . .
$479,795,547
$891,563,925
$1,371,359,472
34-99
Estimating the population of the United States at thirty millions,
the exports per capita, in 1859, would appear to be $11 ^89.
Taking the decennial periods from 1821 to June, 1850, and the
nine years to June, 1859, it will ai)pcar that the proportion of the
State of Ncw-YnrV 1m the whole lias increased from 28.19 P^*"" ^^^^
FOREIGN COMMERCE
435
to about thirty-five per cent, in the exports; and from 37.75 per cent,
to more than two-thirds in the importations.
The custom-house returns show, that towards the close of 1859
there was a gratifying revival in the shipping business of the port of
New- York, the value of both exports and imports being largely in-
creased as compared with the corresponding period of former years;
the influence of which has been felt in the advanced rates paid for
freights, the relative scarcity of ships, and the improved tone of the
shipping interest generally. And with commerce active, the whole
basis of prosperity to our city and country must soon come under
favorable influences.
B. Foreign Trade of Bestoti from 184^ to 18 ^g ^
Although the foreign trade of Bos'.on was much less important than that of
New York, it was considerable. The following statistics from the i860 report
of the Boston Board of Trade indicates the extent of the foreign trade of that city:
Statement of the declared value of both the Domestic and Foreign Exports from
the District of Boston atid Charlestown, during the years ending June 30, 1846-59.
Total
Gold and Silver
Coin and BulHon
included in the
foregoing
Year ending June 30, 1846
$ '8,968,031
9,716,991
12,204,812
8,692,073
9,141,652
10,498,153
13,388,512
18,094,683
19,751,916
26,641,661
27,985,653
28,326,918
20,979,853
16,172,120
$ 460,815
374,471
2,550,857
178,596
559,468
1,265,855
4,206,743
4,004,549
5,268,450
12,279,068
12,010,083
13,085,318
5,196,167
4,151,860
1847. •...•
1848
1849
1850
1851
1852
1853
1854
1855
1856
1857
1858
1859
Sixth Annual Report of the Boston Board of Trade (Boston, i860), 90-1.
436 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
Statement of the same for the year ending December 31, 1859
In American vessels $ 9,729,935
In Foreign vessels 7,818,725
Total $17,548,660
Value of gold and silver exported 5,724,970
Statement of the Declared value of Goods, Wares and Merchandise, of the growth,
produce and manufacture of Foreign Countries, Imported into the District of
Boston atid Charlestown, during the years ending June 30, 1846-59.
Year ending June 30, 1846 $22,615,117
1847 35,523,968
1848 27,182,308
1849 -^ 23,341,145
1850 28,659,733
1851 30,508,417
1852 31,958,192
1853 39,300,912
1854 45,988,545
1855 43,256,279
1856 41,661,088
1857 44,840,083
1858 40,432,710
1859 41,174,670
Statement of the same for the year ending December 31, i8jq
In American vessels $29,501 ,582
In Foreign vessels 14,452,443
Total $43,954,025
C. A View of the New Orleans Levee in 18 jq ^
The foreign commerce of New Orleans was important at an early day; and even
after the railroads had robbed the Mississippi River of its up-river trade, the
exports from New Orleans continued to be large. From that city were shipp>ed
great quantities of cotton, produce, molasses and tobacco. An English traveler
draws a picture of the levee in 1839 as follows:
The most animated and bustling part of all the city is the Lev^e,
or raised bank running along immediately in front of the river, and
extending beyond the houses and streets, from 100 to 150 yards, for
a length of at least three miles, from one end of the city to the other.
Along the edge of this Lev6e, all the ships and vessels are anchored
» The Slave States of America. By J. S. Buckingham (I 'nvl^n r,K,.1^ T ^^25-7.
FOREIGN COMMERCE
437
or moored in tiers of three or four deep. The largest and finest ves-
sels are usually at the upper end of the city, near Lafayette, the steam-
boats lie in the centre, and the smaller vessels and coasters occupy
the bank at the lower end of the city. It may be doubted whether
any river in the world can exhibit so magnificent a spectacle as the
Mississippi in this respect. There are more ships in the Thames,
but the largest and finest of these are usually in the various docks,
while the smaller kind are chiefly seen without, and the Thames has
not half the ample breadth and sweep of the Mississippi. There are
as many vessels, perhaps, in the Mersey, but these are nearly all in
dock, and the river is comparatively bare. The Tagus is a broader
stream, but its shipping are neither so numerous nor so fine; and even
New York, splendid as is the array of ships presented by her wharfs,
is not so striking as New Orleans, where a greater number of large,
handsome, and fine vessels seemed to me to line the magnificent curve
of the Mississippi, than I had ever before seen in any one port. The
reflection that these are all congregated here to receive and convey
away to other lands the produce of such mighty streams as the Mis-
souri and the Mississippi, the Ohio, the Tennessee, the Arkansas,
and the Red River, including more than 20,000 miles of inland navi-
gation, the sources of the principal streams being in the region of
perpetual snows, and their outlet in the latitude of perpetual verdure,
carries one's admiration to the verge of the subUme.
The Levee itself, on the edge of which all these ships and vessels
are anchored, is covered with bales of cotton and other merchandise;
and in the busy season, such as that in which we were in New Orleans,
in March and April, it is filled with buyers and sellers, from every part
of the Union, and spectators from all parts of the world. There are
no less than 1,500 drays for the conveyance of this merchandise,
licensed by the city; and they seem to be all in motion, flying to and
fro on a brisk trot, whether laden or empty — the horses never walk-
ing, and the drivers never sitting, either on the shafts, or in the drays,
as in Europe. The bales of cotton, on their arrival in the rafts or
steam-boats, from the upper country, are carried off to the numerous
establishments of steam-presses, where they are compressed into
about half their original bulk, and repacked in this reduced shape for
shipment to foreign ports. All this, with the arrival and departure
every day of many hundreds of passengers up and down the river,
from Cincinnati, Louisville, St. Louis, and Pittsburg, to the Havannah,
to New York, and to Texas, occasions such incessant bustle, that every
body and every thing seems to be in perpetual motion.
438
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
VII. Important Export Crops
A. Exportation of Cotton for Various Years from 1821 to i860 ^
i
The most important export crop of the United States prior to i860 was raw
cotton. It rose in value from a little over $20,000,000 in 182 1 to about $160,000,000
in 1859; while the price per pound varied from 5.92 cents in 1845 to 20.9 cents in
1825.
Sea Island
Other
Total
Pri
Value,
Year
Pounds
DoUars
pound,
Cents
Av.
1821
11,344,066
113,549,339
124,893,405
20,157,484
16.2
1825
9,665,278
166,784,629
176,449,907
36,846,649
20.9
1830
8,147,16s
290,311,937
298,459,102
29,674,883
9.9
1835
7,752,736
379,686,256
387,358,992
64,961,302
16.8
1840
8.779,669
735,161,392
743,941,061
63,870,307
8.5
1845
9,380,625
863,516,371
872,905,996
51,739,643
5-92
1850
8,236,463
627,145,141
635,381,604
71,984,616
II-3
1855
13,058,590
995,366,011
1,008,424,601
88,143,844
8.74
1856
12,797,225
1,338,634,476
1,351,431,701
128,382.351
949
1857
12,940,725
1,035,341,750
1,048,282,475
131,575.859
12.SS
1858
12,101,058
1,106,522,954
1,118,624,012
131,386,661
11.72
1859
13,713,556
1,372,755,066
1,386,468,556
161,434,923
12.7a
i860
15,598,698
1,752,087,640
1,767,686,338
191,806,55s
10.85
B. American Wheat and the World Crop, 1846-1860 *
Another important export crop was wheat. In growing wheat the American
farmer was compelled to compete with the wheat-growing regions of P2urope, and
the condition of crops in those sections materially affected the price received by
the American farmer. A writer in i860 discusses .American wheat in its relation
to the world crop as follows:
The year of the largest import of flour into Great Britain was
1847; but in 185 1 the aggregate of wheat, in flour and grain, reached
the maximum. The quantities of corn and other grain imported
into Great Britain have varied considerably. In 1847 the quantity
was 7,448,107 qrs., or 59,584,856 bushels. Of that quantity one-
third came from the United States. The quantity required has never
' Treasury Report, 1S61 (Washingtcm, 1861), 250-1.
' Hunt's Mcrcfumts' Mui^izine (New York, i8<x5), XLIII, 405-8.
FOREIGN COMMERCE 439
been so large since. France was a large importer of wheat in those .
years — '46 and '47. The demand of those two countries upon the
rest of the world was, it appears, 99,849,272 bushels — a quantity
nearly equal to the whole crops of the United States. The States of
Belgium and Holland were also short, and while all the navigation
laws were suspended to give perfect freedom for the transportation
of grain, and some national vessels were used to transport it, the prices
of freight rose immensely. Flour to Liverpool, from New York, paid
$2 per bbl., and grain 50 cents per bushel. While these enormous
supplies were required, and prices that rose at one time to 120 s. per
, quarter were paid, the United States supplied but a very unimportant
proportion of the whole amount — that is to say, about 44,000,000
bushels. From 1848 to 1852 France was an exporter of wheat. The.
demand upon the markets of the world was thereby diminished, and
the supply increased. The crop of 1852 again failed in France, and
from that date, through the Russian war, she was again a large im-
porter. In the four years ending with 1857 she bought 85,800,000
bushels of wheat, and England bought 184,000,000 in the same time,
or together, 269,800,000 bushels, of which the United States supplied
67,700,000 bushels, or 25 per cent. In all that period, in the United
States the consumption of food was very active, because the building
of railroads was pursued to an extent that absorbed $600,000,000 of
capital; land speculations were rife; 2,000,000 emigrants arrived in
the country, and great numbers moved from East to West on the
new lands that were to be soon covered with the growing raihoads.
These causes produced such a demand for food at the door of the*
growers as to leave but little surplus to send East, and the quantities
that did go abroad could be spared only at very high prices. We
have in those causes a reason that the United States, a peculiarly
agricultural country, have not yet taken their rank as a supplier of
food for Europe. In the years of large demand heretofore the means
of transportation did not exist. In the last three years, when the
means did exist, the demand was slack. The moment has now appar-
ently arrived when the demand is to take place in face of the most
extensive means of meeting it. The Western crops are represented
as so large as to give rise to fears that it may be overdone, and that
the demand, great as it may be from Europe, will not suffice to raise
I prices, in face of such overwhelming suppHes, to a level that will pay
iifor the distant transportation. In other words, that the demand will
Jibe met before the most remote States can get their supplies to
I hand.
440 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
If we look back to the famine of 1847, we find that the Erie Canal
and the lines of roads that now form the New York Central were the
only through communications to the lakes. They were the only
means of freight transportation, and the law did not allow the rail-
road to carry freight until 1850. The basin of the great lakes was
fed only by the Ohio canals at Toledo and Cleveland. The Indiana
which canal did not operate — the Illinois Canal was not then avail-
able, and there were no railroads to drain the produce of the interior
to the ports. The great rivers carried down supplies to New Orleans,
and food found its way abroad thence. The lakes were supplied with
a very moderate amount of sail tonnage, and the expense of transporta-
tion from Chicago to New York was very great.
The great famine demand began in 1846. At the close of July,
in that year, the price of flour in New York was $4, and the rate rost
steadily until it reached $9X12 per barrel. . . .
Thus, over 26,000,000 bushels of wheat were exported as flour and
grain, and that export raised flour to $9^12 per barrel. Of corn only
16,326,050 bushels were exported; but Ihat small quantity only —
not 3 per cent, of the crop — raised the price to 90 cents per bushel,
and the freight to 28 s. [d?], or 56 cents from New York to Liverpool in
February, 1847. The total tonnage of the United States in that year
was 1,241,313 registered, and 1,597,733 coasting. Of the latter,
147,883 was owned at the lake ports, and 84,731 at the river ports
there being then no railroad transportation. The production of grain
in 1847 was probably by no means so large as the figures given for
the census of 1850, since the high price obtained in those famine years
not only stimulated production, but also ship building. These two
circumstances caused low prices of grain and of freights in the suc-
ceeding years. It then appears that one of the most extraordinary
famines of modern times could only draw from the United States
42,000,000 bushels of corn and wheat.
The high freights greatly stimulated the building of vessels — as
well registered as coasting and lake tonnage — and the returns show
that the latter increased 50 per cent, and the building of registered
was in as large a ratio. The trade of 1847 was strangled for want of
means of transportation. These had increased very much up to
1853. In the five years from 1847 to 1853 the government sold
12,000,000 acres of public lands, and 1,500,000 settlers arrived from
abroad, while great num])ers moved from the Eastern States to th€
West. In the same period the Northern line of railroads was opened;
the New York Central allowed to carry freight; the Erie was opened
FOREIGN COMMERCE 441
through, and the connection between Baltimore and Philadelphia and
the West completed. In 1847 the Ohio Canal at Cleveland was the
only work which fed the lakes, and these delivered 644,913 barrels
of flour in that year. Before 1853 the Indiana Canal was opened;
the two great Michigan roads were opened, and the Illinois canal was
completed, drawing grain to Chicago, in connection with one or two
railroads. The tonnage of the lakes had become large, and the
tonnage of the whole country had increased from 2,417,000 in 1847,
to 4,138,440 in 1852, or 45 per cent. Such was the state of affairs
when the harvest of Europe again failed in 1852. The lake tonnage
had increased to 271,100, and the river tonnage to 169,000.
In this state of affairs the harvest of Europe again failed — not the
potato crop so much as the grain crop — and there was again much
excitement, and we may trace its influence upon the markets. It
is now just seven years since the English harvests promised the same
as they now do. At that time the present writer had occasion to de-
scribe the state of the markets as follows, after carefully condensing
the news: —
" Many weeks since we laid before our readers the leading circum-
stances that were conspiring to make the coming year one of the most
important eras in the corn trade. Unfortimately the weather in
England and Western Europe has been such as to heighten the worst
features of the case, and support large estimates of the probable wants
of the West of Europe, including England. The government of
France has exerted itself to keep down prices; but the general rise
in France of 14I cents per bushel, together with the suspension of the
corn duties in France, Belgium, Holland and Italy, has sent the Eng-
lish and French buyers in competition into this market. Leading
English firms, although impressed with the idea that the demand is
to some extent speculative and premature, have sent orders for choice
flour, limited at 25 s., laid down in Liverpool. According to present
estimates the wants are: —
Of France bushels, 38,781,165
Of England " 1 28,000,000
Total, all kinds of grain " 166,781,165
"In usual years England wants half this quantity, or 64,000,000
bushels, of which France suppHes usually 30,000,000, making the
two countries dependent upon the rest of Europe for 34,000,000
bushels; hence they require, together, 132,000,000 bushels more than
442 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
usual; and Holland, Belgium, Italy, and Egypt are short. These
general facts are calculated to excite the minds of holders extrava-
gantly, and cause loss and disaster by inducing them to hold for
exorbitant prices. The lesson of former years showed that first
sellers did best."
Bearing in mind what we had said of the exaggeration of the
English reports, it will be obvious that the estimated wants were
three times what was actually imported, and France imported about
one-fourth of the estimates.
Such was the state of affairs in 1853, and the description will ans\N er
pretty well for the present prospect. . . .
C. Exportation of Indian Corn^ 1 820-1 860 ^
Although Indian corn was not as large an export commodity before i860 as
wheat or cotton, it was of considerable importance and growing. Its place in the
foreign commerce of the United States was as follows:
In the year 18 16 the crop of Indian corn was very generally cut of
throughout the northern states by frequent and severe frosts, so that
as a cultivated crop it fell into disrepute in many sections, and was
cultivated less for some years, by individual farmers, till its intrinsic
importance as a sure and reUable crop brought it gradually into favor.
At the time it was first included in the United States census, in 1840,
the aggregate yield of the country was 377,531,875, or nearly four
hundred millions bushels. In 1850 it had reached within a frac-
tion of six hundred millions, being returned as 592,071,104, occu-
pying 31,000,000 of acres. The value of this enormous crop was
$296,034,552. This was a gain of 57 per cent., or 214,539,229 bushels,
while the increase of population during the same period was only 35
per cent. According to the estimate of the secretary of the treasury
the crop of Indian corn in 1855 was between seven and eight hundred
millions, or nearly double that of 1840. But this estimate was
entirely too low, the crop being the largest and best that yeai
that had ever been raised in the country, and amounting, at least, tc
1,000,000,000 bushels, and its value, at a low estimate, was
$400,000,000.
We see, therefore, on reference to the census, that this crop formed
about three-sixteenths of the whole agricultural product of the countrj
in 1850, and that the pr()])()rtion of improved land devoted to con
* Eighty Years' Progress. By Charles L. Flint (Hartford, 1869), 70-1.
FOREIGN COMMERCE
443
was .333, while the number of bushels to each person in the country
was 25.53.
From the amounts of corn stated above, as raised in 1840 and in
1850, it will be seen that we had a very large surplus over and above
what we needed for home consumption; though it must be evident
that vast quantities are, and must be required to feed to the large
number of cattle and swine, which we have seen are annually prepared
for the shambles. It appears from official statistics that the exporta-
tion of Indian corn has rapidly increased since 1820, when it amounted
to only 607,277 bushels, valued at $261,099, and 131,669 barrels of
Indian meal, valued at $345,180, making an aggregate of $616,279.
In 1 830-1 the number of bushels of corn exported from the country
was 571,312, valued at $396,617, and 207,604 barrels of Indian meal,
valued at $595,434. In 1 840-1 the number of bushels of corn ex-
ported was 535,727, valued at $312,954, with 232,284 barrels of meal,
worth $682,457.
But in 1845-6 the amount rose to 1,826,068 bushels, valued at
$1,186,663; and from that in 1846-7 to 16,326,050 bushels of corn,
worth $14,395,212. The next year, 1847-8, it reached nearly six
millions of bushels; and in 1848-9 to upward of thirteen millions,
valued at $7,966,369.
The amount of Indian corn and Indian meal exported from the
country from 185 1 to 1858 may be seen as follows: —
1851
1852
1S53
1854
1855
1856
1857
i8=:8
Bush, of
corn
3,426,811
2,627,075
2,274,909
7,768,816
7,807,58s
10,292,280
5,505,318
4,766,145
Value
$1,762,549
1,540,225
1,374,077
6,074,277
6,961,571
7,622,565
5,184,666
3,259,039
Bbls. of In-
dian meal
203,622
181,105
212,118
257,403
267,208
293,607
267,504
237,637
Value
$ 622,866
574.380
709,974
1,002,976
1,237,122
1,175,688
957,791
877,692
The amount of exports is, of course, regulated very much by for-
eign demand. If breadstuffs are scarce in Europe and prices high,
they are immediately shipped from this country to take advantage of
the market. If the reverse is the case, and prices are low, our surplus
is kept at home. It is but a few years since the foreign demand for
444 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
breadstuffs began to any extent. Now and then would occur a year
of unusual scarcity, to be sure, but it was rare to find any extensive
demand year after year for our surplus products. The increase of
population beyond the point of capacity to produce, in Great Britain
and the continent of Europe, now gives the bread question an im-
portance paramount to all others with the European statesman, and
it is having and will have a powerful influence on our agriculti
Consumption has overtaken production — got beyond it, in fact, ,.
some of the countries of Europe — and henceforth importation mu-t
supply an ever increasing demand, since, however much the aj
cultural production of western Europe may increase by the impr.
ing condition of its agriculture, it cannot hereafter keep up with the
natural increase of population, which, at the present time, in Great
Britain, is at the rate of a thousand per day. This crowding popula-
tion will appear in its true light, in an agricultural point of y'l'
when it is considered that if the United States and its territories ^^
as thickly populated as Great Britain, they would contain ab
750,000,000 of people, a number nearly equal to the whole populati r
of the globe.
The year 1824, it is asserted by some, was the turning point at
which consumption overtook and exceeded production in Engku '^
Since that time the agricultural production of Great Britain has Ix
vastly increased by the improvement of agriculture and live sti*
but great and perceptible as improvement has been, it has not, .
cannot fully supply its overgrown population. The famine in Irel i
in 1847, causing the loss of half a million of lives by starvation, ;
the political revolution which soon followed on the continent in i >
growing out, to a great extent, of a short supply of food, are fresh ii
the minds of everyone.
Now this surplus of population and the consequent permaii*
demand for the productions of our soil are of comparatively rcr<
date, and we have hardly, even yet, begun to realize their importa
and the influence which they are hereafter to exert in developing i
resources of our soil. It was only a century ago (1756) \\i
D'Anqueville, a poHtical economist of France, said: "England cc)ul>
grow corn enough in one year to supply herself for four." N-
though she has, at least, three times as much land under cultivat i
as then, and though the yield of her products to the acre has been m
than doubled, yet she imports food in the shape of corn, wheat, 01
meal, and flour to the extent of more than £45,000,000, or $225,000,0
Now, though western Europe has been supplied, to a large extern
FOREIGN COMMERCE 445
from Russia and other parts of the world, it is becoming more and
more evident that it has got to look more and more to this country
for its supphes, and this fact is recognized by many of the leading
journals and statesmen of Europe, as, for instance, the Mark Lane
Gazette, which says: "One fact is clear, that it is to western America
that we must, in future, look for the largest amount of cereal
produce."
i\^L
CHAPTER XIV
PUBLIC LANDS AND AGRICULTURE, 1820-1860
I. The Public Domain
Extent and Importance, 18 J2 ^
Before the Civil War, and even afterward, Congress repeatedly legislated re-
garding the public lands. These lands were the common property of the states
and tended to hold them together by a common interest. At the same time the
pubUc land question is intimately linked with the slavery question, for it was the
desire of each section to exclude the other from the territories that brought about
so much controversy.
At the beginning of its land policy, Congress thought more of the revenue to
be derived than the good to be extended. In time, however, this poUcy underwent
a change. The price of land was reduced, the minimum size of entry was decreased,
and the settlers encouraged in other ways to take up land. To facilitate this move-
ment, manv of the states requested the federal government to grant to them the
unentered lands lying within their borders. This agitation, coupled with the one
for a reduction in the price per acre, occupied the attention of Congress in 1831
Mr. Clay, as chairman of the senate committee on manufactures, reported in
part on the pubhc domain as follows :
At the commencement of the revolutionary war, there were, in
some of the States, large bodies of waste and unappropriated lands,
principally west of the Alleghany mountains, and in the southern
or southwestern quarters of the Union; whilst in others, of more
circumscribed or better defined limits, no such resource existed. Dur-
ing the progress of that war, the question was agitated what should
be done with these lands in the event of its successful termination?
That question \^as likely to lead to paralyzing divisions and jealousies.
The States not containing any considerable quantity of waste lands,
contended that, as the war was waged with united means, with equal
sacrifices, and at the common expense, the waste lands ought to be
considered as a common property, and not be exclusively appro-
priated to the benefit of the particular States within which they hap-
pened to be situated. These, however, resisted the claim, upon the
* Senate Committee Report. Henry Clay, chairman. Printed in House Refwrtl,
1831-2 (Washington, 1831 [1832?]), HI, RcjKJrt 448, pp. 14-17, 19-26.
PUBLIC LANDS AND AGRICULTURE
447
ground that each State was entitled to the whole of the territory,
whether waste or cultivated, included within its chartered limits.
To check the progress of discontent, and arrest the serious conse-
quences to which the agitation of this question might lead, Congress
recommended to the States to make liberal cessions of the waste and
unseated lands to the United States; and, on the loth day of October,
1780, ^^ Resolved, That the unappropriated lands that may be ceded
or reHnquished to the United States, by any particular State, pursuant
to the recommendation of Congress of the 6th day of September
last, shall be disposed oi for the common benefit of the United States,"
&c. . . .
The other source whence the public lands of the United States
have been acquired, are, ist, the treaty of Louisiana, concluded in
1803; and, 2dly, the treaty of Florida, signed in 1819. By the first,
all the country west of the Mississippi, and extending to the Pacific
ocean, known as Louisiana, which had successively belonged to France,
Spain, and France again, including the island of New Orleans, and
stretching east of the Mississippi to the Perdido, was transferred to
the United States in consideration of the sum of fifteen millions of
dollars, which they stipulated to pay, and have since punctually
paid, to France, besides other conditions deemed favorable and im-
portant to her interests. By the treaty of Florida, both the provinces
of East and West Florida, whether any portion of them was or was
not actually comprehended within the true limits of Louisiana, were
ceded to the United States in consideration, besides other things,
of the payment of five millions of dollars which they agreed to pay,
and have since accordingly paid.
The large pecuniary considerations thus paid to these two foreign
powers were drawn from the Treasury of the people of the United
States; and, consequently, the countries for which they formed the
equivalents ought to be held and deemed for the common benefit of
all the people of the United States. To divert the lands from that
general object; to misapply or sacrifice them ; to squander or improvi-
dently cast them away; would be alike subversive of the interests
of the people of the United States, and contrary to the plain dictates
of the duty by which the General Government stands bound to the
States and to the whole people.
Prior to the treaties of Louisiana and Florida, Congress had adopted
a system for surveying and selling the public lands, devised with much
care and great deliberation, the advantages of which having been
fully tested by experience, it was subsequently applied to the coun-
448 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
tries acquired by those treaties. According to that system, all public
lands offered for sale, are previously accurately surveyed, by skilful
surveyors, in ranges of townships of six miles square each, which
townships are subdivided into thirty-six equal divisions or square
miles, called sections, by lines crossing each other at right angles, and
generally containing 640 acres. These sections are again divided in
quarters, and, prior to the year 1820, no person could purchase a leh>^
quantity than a quarter. In that year, provision was made for the
further division of the sections into eighths, thereby allowing a pur-
chaser to buy only eighty acres, if he wished to purchase no more.
During the present session of Congress, further to extend accommo-
dations to the purchasers of the public lands, and especially to the
poorer classes, the sections have been again divided into sixteenths,
admitting a purchase of only forty acres. . . .
. . . [I]t appears that the aggregate of all sums of money which
have been expended by the United States in the acquisition of the
public lands, including interest on account of the purchases of Loui-
siana and Florida, up to the 30th day of September, 1831, and includ-
ing also expenses in their sale and management, is $48,077,551 40;
and the amount of money received at the Treasury for proceeds of
the sales of the public lands to the 30th September, 1831, is $37,-
272,713 31. The Government, therefore, has not been reimbursed
by $10,804,8381^^. According to the same report, it appears that
the estimated amount of unsold lands, on which the foreign and
Indian titles have been extinguished, is 227,293,884 within the limits
of the new States and Territories; and that the Indian title remains
on 113,577,869 acres within the same Umits. That there have been
granted to Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, and Alabama, for internal improve-
ments, 2,187,665 acres; for colleges, academies and universities in
the new States and Territories, the quantity of 508,009; for education,
being the thirty-sixth part of the public lands appropriated for common
schools, the amount of 7,952,538 acres; and for seats of Government
in some of the new States and Territories, 21,589 acres. By a report
of the Commissioner of the General Land Office, communicated to
Congress with the annual message of the President of the United
States in December, 1827, the total quantity of the public lands, be-
yond the boundaries of the new States and Territories, was estimated
to be 750,000,000. The aggregate, therefore, of all the unsold and
unappropriated j)ublic lands of the United States, surveyed and un-
surveyed, on which the Indian title remains or has been extinguished,
lying within, <'in<l without tlx- luumrlnrir^ of th<' new St.it*-^ ind Terri-
PUBLIC LANDS AND AGRICULTURE 449
tories, agreeably to the two reports now referred to, is 1,090,871,753
acres. There had been 138,988,224 acres surveyed, and the quan-
tity only of 19,239,412 acres sold up to the ist January,
1826. . . .
The Government is the proprietor of much the largest quantity of
the unseated lands of the United States. What it has in market,
bears a large proportion to the whole of the occupied lands within
their limits. If a considerable quantity of any article, land, or any
commodity whatever, is in market, the price at which it is sold will
affect, in some degree, the value of the whole of that article, whether
exposed to sale or not. The influence of a reduction of the price of
the public lands would probably be felt throughout the Union; cer-
tainly in all the western States, and most in those which contain, or
are nearest to, the public lands. There ought to be the most cogent
and conclusive reasons for adopting a measure which might seriously
impair the value of the property of the yeomanry of the country.
Whilst it is decidedly the most important class in the community, most
patient, patriotic, and acquiescent in whatever public policy is pur-
sued, it is unable or unwilling to resort to those means of union and
concert which other interests employ to make themselves heard and
respected. Government should, therefore, feel itself constantly bound
to guard, with sedulous care, the rights and welfare of the great body
of our yeomanry. Would it be just towards those who have hereto-
fore purchased public lands at higher prices, to say nothing as to the
residue of the agricultural interest of the United States, to make such
a reduction, and thereby impair the value of their property? Ought
not any such plan of reduction, if adopted, to be accompanied
with compensation for the injury which they would inevitably
sustain?
A material reduction of price would excite and stimulate the spirit
of speculation, now dormant, and probably lead to a transfer of vast
quantities of the public domain from the control of Government to
the hands of the speculator. At the existing price, and with such
extensive districts as the public constantly offers in the market, there
is no great temptation to speculation. The demand is regular, keeping
pace with the progress of emigration, and is suppHed on known and
moderate terms. If the price were much reduced, the strongest
incentives to engrossment of the better lands would be presented to
large capitalists; and the emigrant, instead of being able to purchase
from his own Government 'upon uniform and established conditions,
might be compelled to give much higher and more fluctuating prices
450 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY A
to the speculator. An illustration of this effect is afforded by the
military bounty lands granted during the late war. Thrown into
the market at prices below the Government rate, they notoriously
became an object of speculation, and have principally fallen into the ;
hands of speculators, retarding the settlement of the districts which i
include them. I
The greatest emigration that is believed now to take place fr'
any of the States, is from Ohio, Kentucky, and Tennessee. I
effects of a material reduction in the price of the public lands, would
be, I St. To lessen the value of real estate in those three States. 2(1.
To diminish their interest in the public domain, as a common fund
for the benefit of all the States. And, 3dly. To offer what would
operate as a bounty to further emigration from those States, occasion-
ing more and more lands, situated within them, to be thrown into
the market, thereby not only lessening the value of their lands, but
draining them both of their population and currency.
And, lastly. Congress has, within a few years, made large and
liberal grants of the public lands to several States. To Ohio, 922,0 -
acres; to Indiana, 384,728 acres; to Illinois, 480,000 acres; and
Alabama, 400,000 acres; amounting, together, to 2,187,665 acr
Considerable portions of these lands yet remain unsold. The rech.
tion of the price of the public lands, generally, would impair the value
of those grants, as well as injuriously affect that of the lands whit h
have been sold in virtue of them.
On the other hand, it is inferred and contended, from the lai
amount of public land remaining unsold after having been so Ic
exposed to sale, that the price at which it is held is too high. But
this apparent tardiness is satisfactorily explained by the immcr
quantity of public lands which have been put into the market
Government. It is well known that the new States have constant 1\
and urgently pressed the extinction of the Indian title upon land^
within their respective limits; and, after its extinction, that th
should be brought into market as rapidly as practicable. The libtr,
policy of the General Government, coinciding with the wishes of th-
new States, has prompted it to satisfy the wants of emigrants fr*
every part of the Union, by exhibiting vast districts of land for s,
in all the States and Territories, thus offering every variety of clini.i
and situation to the free choice of settlers. From these causes,
has resulted that the power of emigration has been totally incomj
tent to absorb the immense bodies of waste lands offered in the mark.
For the capacity to purchase is, after all, limited by the emigratini,
PUBLIC LANDS AND AGRICULTURE 451
and the progressive increase of population. If the quantity thrown
into the market had been quadrupled, the probability is that there
would not have been much more annually sold than actually has been.
With such extensive fields for selection before them, purchasers,
embarrassed as to the choice which they should make, are sometimes
probably influenced by caprice or accidental causes. Whilst the
better lands remain, those of secondary value will not be purchased.
A judicious farmer or planter would sooner give one dollar and
a quarter per acre for first rate land, than receive, as a donation,
land of an inferior quality, if he were compelled to settle
upon it. . . .
Is the reduction of the price of the public lands necessary to
accelerate the settlement and population of the States within which
they are situated? Those States are Ohio, Indiana, IlUnois, Mis-
souri, Alabama, Mississippi, and Louisiana. If their growth has been
unreasonably slow and tardy, we may conclude that some fresh
impulse, such as that under consideration, is needed. Prior to the
treaty of Greenville, concluded in 1795, there were but few settlements
within the limits of the present State of Ohio. Principally since
that period, that is, within a term of about forty years, that State,
from a wilderness, the haunt of savages and wild beasts, has risen
into a powerful commonwealth, containing, at this time, a population
of a million of souls, and holding the third or fourth rank among the
largest States in the Union. During the greater part of that term,
the minimum price of the pubUc lands was two dollars per acre; and
of the large quantity with which the settlement of that State com-
menced, there only remain to be sold 5,586,834 acres.
The aggregate population of the United States, exclusive of the
Territories, increased from the year 1820 to 1830, from 9,579,873 to
12,716,697. The rate of the increase, during the whole term of ten
years, including a fraction, may be stated at thirty-three per cent.
The principle of population is presumed to have full scope generally
in all parts of the United States. Any State, therefore, which has
exceeded or fallen short of that rate, may be fairly assumed to have
gained or lost by emigration, nearly to the extent of the excess or
deficiency. From a table accompanying this report, the Senate will
see presented various interesting views of the progress of population
in the several States. In that table, it will be seen that each of eleven
States exceeded, and each of thirteen fell short of an increase at the
average rate of thirty-three per cent. The greatest increase, during
the term, was in the State of Illinois, where it was one hundred and
452 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
eighty-five per cent., or at the rate of i8j per cent, per annum; and
the least was in Delaware, where it was less than six per cent. The
seven States embracing the public lands, had a population, in 1820,
of 1,207,165, and, in 1830, 2,238,802, exhibiting an average increase
of 85 per cent. The seventeen States containing- no part of the
public lands, had a population, in 1820, of 8,372,707, and, in 1830,
of 10,477,895, presenting an average increase of only 25 per cent.
The thirteen States, whose increase, according to the table, was be-
low 7,;^ per cent, contained, in 1820, a population of 5,939,759, and,
in 1830, of 6,966,600, exhibiting an average increase of only seventeen
per cent. The increase of the seven new States upon a capital which,
at the commencement of the term, was 1,207,165, has been greater
than that of the thirteen whose capital then was 5,939,759. In three
of the eleven States, (Tennessee, Georgia, and Maine,) whose popu-
lation exceeded the average increase of 33 per cent., there were pubUc
lands belonging to those States; and, in the fourth, (New York,)
the excess is probably attributable to the rapid growth of the city of
New York, to waste lands in the western part of that State, and to the
great development of its vast resources by means of extensive internal
improvements. . . .
Complaints exist in the new States, that large, bodies of lands, in
their respective territories, being owned by the General Government,
are exempt from taxation to meet the ordinary expenses of the State
Governments, and other local charges; that this exemption continues
for five years after the sale of any particular tract; and that land,
being the principal source of the revenue of those States, an undue
share of the burthen of sustaining the expenses of the State Govern-
ments falls upon the resident population. To all these complaints,
it may be answered that, by voluntary compacts between the new
States respectively, and the General Government, five per cent, of
the nett proceeds of all the sales of the public lands, included within
their limits, are appropriated for internal improvements leading to
or within those States; that a section of land in each township, or
one-thirty-sixth part of the whole of the public lands embraced within
their respective boundaries, has been reserved for ])urj)oses of educa-
tion; and that the policy of the General Government has been uni-
formly marked by great liberality towards the new States, in making
various, and some very extensive grants of the public lands for local
purjxises. But, in accordance with the same spirit of lil)erality, the
committee would recommend an appro])riation to each of the sev<
State'i r<'f'*rr«*d to, of a fiutlvr ^nni of ten ])(T rent . <>n l]i<' n<'tt procecdl
PUBLIC LANDS AND AGRICULTURE 453
of the sales of that part of the pubHc land which lies within it, for
objects of internal improvement in their respective limits. The
tendency of such an appropriation will be not only to benefit those
States, but to enhance the value of the public lands remaining to be
sold. . . .
If the proposed cession to the new States were to be made at a
fair price, such as the General Government could obtain from indi-
vidual purchasers under the present system, there would be no motive
for it, unless the new States are more competent to dispose of the pub-
lic lands than the common Government. They are now sold under
one uniform plan, regulated and controlled by a single legislative
authority, and the practical operation is perfectly understood. If
they were transferred to the new States, the subsequent disposition
would be according to laws emanating from various legislative sources.
Competition would probably arise between the new States in the
terms which they would offer to purchasers. Each State would be
desirous of inviting the greatest number of emigrants, not only for the
laudable purpose of populating rapidly its own territories, but with
the view to the acquisition of funds to enable it to fulfil its engage-
ments to the General Government. Collisions between the States
would probably arise, and their injurious consequences may be imag-
ined. A spirit of hazardous speculation would be engendered. Va-
rious schemes in the new States would be put afloat to sell or divide the
public lands. Companies and combinations would be formed in this
country, if not in foreign countries, presenting gigantic and tempting,
but delusive projects; and the history of legislation, in some of the
States of the Union, admonishes us that a too ready ear is some-
times given by a majority, in a legislative assembly, to such
projects.
A decisive objection to such a transfer for a fair equivalent, is, that
it would estabhsh a new and dangerous relation between the General
Government and the new States. In abolishing the credit which
had been allowed to purchasers of the public lands prior to the year
1820, Congress was principally governed by the consideration of the
inexpediency and hazard of accumulating a large amount of debt in
the new States, all bordering on each other. Such an accumulation
was deemed unwise and unsafe. It presented a new bond of interest,
of sympathy, and of union, partially operating to the possible preju-
dice of the common bond of the whole Union. But that debt was
* ; a debt due from individuals, and it was attended with this encouraging
security, that purchasers, as they successively completed the payments
454 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
for their lands, would naturally be disposed to aid the Government
in enforcing payment from delinquents. The project, which tl>
committee are now considering, is, to sell to the States, in their sovt i
eign character, and, consequently, to render them public debtors i
the General Government to an immense amount. This would in-
evitably create between the debtor States a common feeling, and a
common interest, distinct from the rest of the Union. These Stat(
are all in the western and southwestern quarter of the Union, remote-
from the centre of federal power. The debt would be felt as a load
from which they would constantly be desirous to relieve themselvc-
and it would operate as a strong temptation, weakening, if ni
dangerous, to the existing confederacy. . . .
If the proposed cession be made for a price merely nominal, it
would be contrary to the express conditions of the original cessions
from primitive States to Congress, and contrary to the obligations
which the General Government stands under to the whole people
of the United States, arising out of the fact that the acquisitions of
Louisiana and Florida, and from Georgia, were obtained at a great
expense, borne from the common treasure, and incurred for the com-
mon benefit. Such a gratuitous cession could not be made without
a positive violation of a solemn trust, and without manifest injustice
to the old States. And its inequality among the new States would
be as marked as its injustice to the old would be indefensible. Thus,
Missouri, with a population of 140,455, would acquire 38,291,152 acres;
and the State of Ohio, with a population of 935,884, would obtain
only 5,586,834 acres. Supposing a division of the land among the
citizens of those two States respectively, the citizen of Ohio would
obtain less than six acres for his share, and the citizen of Missouri
upwards of two hundred and seventy-two acres as his proportion.
Upon full and thorough consideration, the committee have come
to the conclusion, that it is inexpedient either to reduce the price of
the public lands, or to cede them to the new States. They believe,
on the contrary, that sound policy coincides with the duty which has
devolved on the General Government to the whole of the States, and
the whole of the people of the Union, and enjoins the preservation of
the existing system as having been tried and approved after long and
triumphant experience. But, in consequence of the extraordinary
financial prosperity which the United States enjoy, the question merits
examination, whether, whilst the General Government steadily r^
tains the control of this great national resource in its own hands, after
the payment of the public debt, the proceeds of the sales of the public
PUBLIC LANDS AND AGRICULTURE 455
lands, no longer needed to meet the ordinary expenses of Government,
may not be beneficially appropriated to some other objects for a lim-
ited time? . . .
The inquiry remains, what ought to be the specific application of
the fund under the restriction stated? After deducting the ten per
cent, proposed to be set apart for the new States, a portfon of the
committee would have preferred that the residue should be applied
to the objects of internal improvement, and colonization of the free
blacks, under the direction of the General Government. But a
majority of the committee believes it better, as an alternative for the
scheme of cession to the new States, and as being most likely to give
general satisfaction, that the residue be divided among the twenty-
four States, according to their federal representative population, to
be applied to education, internal improvement, or colonization, or
to the redemption of any existing debt contracted for internal improve-
ments, as each State, judging for itself, shall deem most conformable
with its own interests and policy. . . .
II. The Public Lands and Wages
A. Secretary Walker on the Public Lands, 1845 ^
The ease with which public land could be acquired by the people had an im-
portant influence on American industry. Practically every employee, whether he
worked in town or on the land, was a potential land owner, and should he at any
time become dissatisfied with conditions he had the opportunity of turning to the
land. Such a situation tended to make wages relatively high in all kinds of in-
dustries. Furthermore, it held out to the day worker the opportunity of becoming
his own master by taking up and cultivating the soil. Because of this possibility
of escape to the land, labor was generally prosperous, and the labor troubles of a
later date were yet unknown.
jl Connected with this department, and the finances, is the question
' of the sales of the pubUc lands. The proceeds of these sales, it is
beheved, should continue to constitute a portion of the revenue,
diminishing to that extent the amount required to be raised by the
tariff. The net proceeds of these sales paid into the treasury during
the last fiscal year, was $2,077,022 30; and from the first sales in 1787
up to the 30th of September last, was $118,607,335 91. The average
annual sales have been much less than 2,000,000 of acres; yet the
aggregated net proceeds of the sales in 1834, 1835, 1836, and 1837,
was $51,268,617 82. Those large sales were almost exclusively for
^ Treasury Report^ 1845 (Washington, 1846), 15-16. ■ ■ ■ ■
456 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY ^
speculation; and this can only be obviated, at all times, by confining
the sales to settlers and cultivators in limited quantities, sufficient
for farms or plantations. The price at which the pubhc lands should
be sold is an important question to the whole country, but especially
to the people of the new States, living mostly remote from the sea-
board, and who have scarcely felt the presence of the government ,
in local expenditures, but chiefly in the exhaustion of their means for |
purchases of public lands and for customs. The public lands are not
of the same value; yet they are all fixed at one unvarying price, which
is far above the value of a large portion of these lands. The quantity
now subject to entry at the minimum price of $1-25 per acre is 133,
307,457 acres, and 109,035,345 in addition, to which the Indian title
has been extinguished — being an aggregate of 242,342,802 acres,
and requiring a century and a quarter to complete the sales at the
rate they have progressed heretofore, without including any of the
unsold lands of Texas or Oregon, or of the vast region besides to which
the Indian title is not yet extinguished. It is clear, then, that there
is a vast and annually- increasing surplus of public lands, ver}^ little
of which will be sold within any reasonable period at the present price,
and in regard to which the pubHc interest would be promoted, anc
the revenue augmented, by reducing the price. The reduction of the
price of the pubUc lands in favor of settlers and cultivators, woulc
enhance the wages of labor. It is an argument urged in favor of the
tariff, that we ought to protect our labor against what is called
the pauper labor of Europe. But whilst the tariff does not enhance
the wages of labor, the sales of the public lands at low prices, and
in limited quantities, to settlers and cultivators, would accom-
plish this object. If those who live by the wages of labor could
purchase 320 acres of land for $80, 160 acres for $40, or 80 acres for
$20, or 40 acre lot for $10, the power of the manufacturing capitalist
in reducing the wages of labor would be greatly diminished; because,
when these lands were thus reduced in price, those who hve by the
wages of labor could purchase farms at these low rates, and cultivate
the soil for themselves and families, instead of working for others
twelve hours a day in the manufactories. Reduce the price which
the laborer must pay for the public domain; bring thus the means of
purchase within his power; prevent all speculation and monopoly
in the public lands; confine the sales to settlers and cultivators, in
limited quantities; preserve these hundreds of millions of acres, for
ages to come, as homes for the poor and oppressed ; reduce the taxes,
by reducing the tariff, and bringing down the prices which the pool
PUBLIC LANDS AND AGRICULTURE 457
are thus compelled to pay for all the necessaries and comforts of life,
and more will be done for the benefit of American labor than if mil-
lions were added to the profits of manufacturing capital by the enact-
ment of a protective tariff.
B. Ease of Acquisition of Public Lands in i8j2 ^
A magazine writer of the times called attention to the ease with which a laborer
could acquire land for himself as follows:
A few facts on this subject will set this matter in its true light.
Land is now sold in tracts of 80 acres, at $1-25 per acre. For 100
dollars, an unimproved tract of 80 acres may be purchased. In any
of the states west of the Ohio river, a labourer can earn 75 cents per
day, and if his living be supposed to cost 25 cents a day, which in
this plentiful country is a large estimate, he can, by the labour of
two hundred days, or about eight months, purchase a farm. But as
the working days in a year, excluding bad weather, would not amount
to more than 200, it may be safely asserted, that a labourer can pur-
chase a tract of 80 acres, by one year's steady labour. Again, a la-
bourer can get his boarding and $10 per month, the year round,
which would amount to $120, and if $20 be deducted for clothing,
he will in this way have earned the purchase money of a farm, in one
year. All kinds of stock can be raised in that country with facility,
and at little cost. A good horse is worth fifty dollars, a cow from five
to eight dollars, a fat steer from ten to fifteen, and hogs two dollars
per hundred pounds. A man then can purchase eighty acres of land,
by the sale of two horses, or from eight to twelve head of cattle, or
twenty to twenty-five hogs; and as individuals are not prevented
from settling on the public land, but rather encouraged, the means
are thus afforded to farmers of acquiring this property, previous to
the purchase of land. Mechanics' wages are much higher; and those
who work in the most useful arts, such as carpenters, blacksmiths,
shoemakers, &c., are greatly needed. An individual of this class, may
earn money enough to buy eighty acres, in six months. A person who
teaches a common EngHsh school, receives three dollars per quarter
for each pupil, and such persons are in great demand. A school of
thirty scholars will yield ninety dollars per quarter, or $360 per year.
The school-house and fuel being furnished by the patrons, and board-
ing costing about one dollar per week, such an individual may in one
year buy a tract of land. ...
1 American Quarterly Review (Philadelphia, 1832), No. XXII, 280.
458 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
ni. Speculation in Public Lands
A. Land S peculation , 1840 ^
The favorable terms on which government lands could be acquired and the rapid
growth of the population in the west caused speculators to buy up the land in the
hope of reselling it at a substantial advance in price. Oftentimes towns were
laid out in the forests or on the open prairie and advertised as future center-
trade and industry. Some of the cities thus advertised more than realized ;
claims of their friends, but a great majority of them have no existence at the present
time. This speculation did the people a positive injury. It created the desire to
become wealthy without labor, and tended to minimize the successes that came
under ordinary conditions. Of this practice, Mr. Hildrcth, the historian, had the
following to say:
Simultaneously with this increase in the regular trade, and as
generally happens in like cases, a good many new speculations were
brought forward and pursued with ardor. Among these, the specu-
lation in Maine timber lands was the first in order, the most extrava-
gant and irrational, and the most ruinous to those engaged in it. An
idea was started that the timber in Maine was diminishing so rapidly
that the supply must soon be exhausted, and that those who engrossed
what remained, could not fail to grow rich. The rage to purchase
these lands became excessive, and the most extravagant prices were
paid. Many gross frauds were committed, and many arts were re-
sorted to, to entrap purchasers and keep up the price. But it was soon
discovered that the foundation upon which this speculation rested,
was unsound. The lands, late so precious, became altogether un-
salable, and many who imagined they had made great fortunes, found
themselves bankrupt. New England and the city of New York were
the chief sufferers in this business, which however was of too limited
a character to produce any general effects.
The speculations in the public lands, by which this period was
distinguished, were of a far more extended character. Lands were
purchased of the government, in the years 1834, '35, and '36, to the
amount of forty-seven millions of dollars, being nearly half of the
total amount which, up to that time, had been received from that
source. The cause of these immense purchases is to be found in the
following considerations. By the Indian removal policy, which formed
a part of General Jackson's system of administration, vast tracts of
land, both in the North and South, had been suddenly denuded of
• Hanks, Banking, atid Paper Currencies. By Richard Hildreth (Boston, 1840),
91-2.
PUBLIC LANDS AND AGRICULTURE 459
their aboriginal inhabitants, and brought into the market. Many
of these lands held out a great temptation to settlers from their fer-
tility and situation; and the high prices of cotton and fiour brought
a flood of emigration into the South and West, and held out great
temptations to speculators to take up large quantities of the govern-
ment lands, in hopes to sell again at a profit. The influx of emigrants
into these states led, of course, to a great increase of trade. This
caused many villages, and even some considerable towns, to spring
suddenly into existence, and led to a great speculation in "town lots"
and sites for new towns, of a much more extravagant and dangerous
nature than the mere purchase of public lands. Many of those pur-
chases, considering the situation and means of those who made them,
were no doubt injudicious; but taken as a. whole, they will perhaps
prove a source of profit to the purchasers.
B. A Vvew of Western Speculation before the Civil War ^
Naturally the center of land speculation was in the west, where land was
plentiful and cheap.
Speculation in real estate has for many years been the
ruling idea and occupation of the Western mind. Clerks, labourers,
farmers, storekeepers, merely followed their callings for a hving,
while they were speculating for their fortunes. There are no statis-
tics which show how many Yankees went out West to buy a piece of
land and make a farm and home, and live and settle, and die there.
I think that not more than one-half per cent, of the migration from
the East start/sd with that idea; and not even half of these carried
out the idea. The German immigrants, indeed, were better entitled
to be called settlers; but all classes and people of all kinds became
agitated and unsettled, and had their acquisitiveness perpetually
excited by land speculations in some shape or other — new railways,
roads, proposed villages and towns, gold mines, water-powers, coal
mines — some opportunity or other of getting rich all at once by a
lucky hit. . . .
The people of the West became dealers in land, rather than its
cultivators. Scorning cheap clocks, wooden nutmegs, and apple-
parers, the Yankee, stepping from the almost ridiculous to the de-
cidedly sublime, went out West, and traded in the progress of the
rountry. Every one of any spirit, ambition, and intelligence (cash
^ Ten Years in the United States. By D. W. Mitchell (London, 1862), 325-9.
46o READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
was not essential), frequented the National Land Exchange, a v;i
concern: extending from the Mississippi to the Pacific.
By convenient laws, land was made as easily transferable and
convertible as any other species of property. It might and did pass
through a dozen hands within sixty days, rising in price at each
transfer; in the meantime producing buffaloes and Red Indians.
Millions of acres were bought and sold without buyer or sel]er know-
ing where they were, or whether they were anywhere; the buyer only
knowing that he hoped to sell his title to them at a handsome profit.
To keep up and encourage the great western staple, the Progress
of the Country; to inflate as largely and rapidly as possible the
magnificent bubble, public improvements were called for: canals and
railroads were made or proposed, from the established centres of
trade, commerce, and travel, to the indefinite West. Where was the
money to come from to create these costly works, on a vast scale,
in a savage territory, to give value to that territory on the Land
Exchange? It was a grand problem, one would think, but really as
simple as the discovery of America. Endow the railway with a few
millions of acres of the lands it runs through and brings into the
market; then sell these acres to pay for constructing the line, and to
yield the shareholders their interest.
To extend and facilitate these land transactions, these speculations
in the Progress of the Country, the system of selling land on time was
adopted. The instalments of the purchase-money were made pay-
able within various periods (frequently ten years) at low interest,
in the first instance. Thus, A., after much thinking, and watching,
and saving, or borrowing, secured a corner lot in his favourite city
(that was to be), or his half-section in some future garden of the
Union (often actually indicated in the deed of sale by the latitude and
longitude) ; this he sold at a profit to B., on a few years' credit (secured,
of course, by mortgage); B. did the same to C; and so on.
It happened that, while this system was going on, the United States
Government rewarded the services of those who had borne arms in
the wars of the country, by giving them Land Warrants for 80, or
160, or 320 acres, according to services — in all amounting to many
millions of acres. So in 1856 the railroad and canal companies and
the holders of these Land Warrants were everywhere selling, selling,
selling, in large or small parcels of land, until everybody in the West
liad a share of God's earth, quietly increasing in value at the rate of
perhaps a hundred, or at least twenty per cent, per annum — it was
hoiked.
PUBLIC LANDS AND AGRICULTURE 461
As an example of the effects of this real estate mania take Chicago.
There land, for building purposes, was dearer than in the larger East-
ern cities; and house-rent twice as much as in New York. In 1857
it is probable that upwards of eight hundred millions of dollars were
invested in idle Western lands, and lots in proposed cities, which had
been paid for to the extent of one-fourth, the remainder continually
being paid in instalments.
Of course, this business, then, required a good deal of money,
which was forthcoming — while prices were still rising. But the
progress of speculation had got far ahead of its object or subject,
the Progress of the Country.
The Western merchant or storekeeper came to New York, Boston,
Philadelphia, bought goods on credit of the jobbers or importers,
went home, sold them, and invested the proceeds in lands and lots.
Land was becoming the circulating medium. The importers had to
obtain an extension of time to pay the European manufacturer his
dues — unless he would take a few sections of land in such and such
a latitude and longitude.
Of course, such a business as this, engrossing the attention of per-
haps a majority of the population, could not go on long. Unfortu-
nately, the bankruptcy and misery that followed the long put-off
day of settling accounts are already almost forgotten. The whole
domestic history of the time, which ended in the panic of 1857, affords
a striking illustration of the state of mind which has become habitual
in the Northern States; the tendency to seize upon some project or
idea, to dwell upon it, inflate it, make it into a mania, run it into the
ground, as they say, and then forget all about it. But what is most
important to consider is, that the leaders and promoters of these
ruinous, demoralizing manias are, in public opinion, respectable, in-
telligent, and educated people.
C. Early Land Speculation in Illinois, 18JO-1840 ^
The land speculation carried on in Illinois was perhaps typical of all similar
enterprises of the times. Governor Ford of that state had an opportunity of seeing
it in all its phases and describes it as follows :
In the spring and summer of 1836, the great land and town lot
speculation of those times had fairly reached and spread over lUinois.
It commenced in this State first at Chicago, and was the means of
building up that place in a year or two from a village of a few houses,
^ History of Illinois. By Thomas Ford (Chicago, 1854), 181-2.
462 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
to be a city of several thousand inhabitants. The story of the sud-
den fortunes made there, excited at first wonder and amazement, next
a gambling spirit of adventure, and lastly, an all-absorbing desire
for sudden and splendid wealth. Chicago had been for some time
only one great town market. The plats of towns, for a hundred
miles around, were carried there to be disposed of at auction. The
eastern people had caught the mania. Every vessel coming west
was loaded with them, their money and means, bound for Chicago,
the great fairy land of fortunes. But as enough did not come to satisfy
the insatiable greediness of the Chicago sharpers and speculators, they
frequently consigned their wares to eastern markets. Thus, a vessel
would be freighted with land and town lots, for the New York and
Boston markets, at less cost than a barrel of flour. In fact, lands
and town lots were the staple of the country, and were the only articles
of export.
The example of Chicago was contagious. It spread to all the
towns and villages of the State. New towns were laid out in every
direction. The number of towns multiplied so rapidly, that it was
waggishly remarked by many people, that the whole country was
likely to be laid out into towns; and that no land would be left for
farming purposes. The judgments of all our business men were
unsettled, and their minds occupied only by the one idea, the all-
absorbing desire of jumping into a fortune. As all had bought more
town lots and lands than many of them could pay for, and more than
any of them could sell, it was supposed that if the country could be
rapidly settled, its resources developed, and wealth invited from
abroad, that all the towns then of any note would soon become cities,
and that the other towns, laid out only for speculation, and then
without inhabitants, would immediately become thriving and popu-
lous villages, the wealth of all would be increased, and the town lot
market would be rendered stable and secure.
D. Land Speculation in Chicago in i8jj ^
In no other part of the west was speculation in land carried on more indus-
triously than in Chicago. Not only were the lots of that city and the adjoining
farm lands objects of speculation, but Chicago became also a center where specula-
tion in the lots of hundreds of prospective towns was carried on. Miss Martineau
describes the activities there as follows:
Chicago looks raw and bare, standing on the high prairie above
the lake-shore. The houses appeared all insignificant, and run up
* Society in America. Hy Harriet Martineau (London, 1837), 1,349-53-
PUBLIC LANDS AND AGRICULTURE 463
in various directions, without any principle at all. A friend of mine
who resides there had told me that we should find the inns intolerable,
at the period of the great land sales, which bring a c<^ncourse of
speculators to the place. It was even so. The very sight of them
was intolerable; and there was not room for our party <among them
all. I do not know what we should have dene, (unless to betake
ourselves to the vessels in the harbour,) if our coming had not been
foreknown, and most kindly provided for. We were divided between
three families, who had the art of removing all our scruples about
intruding on perfect strangers. None of us will loife the lively and
pleasant associations with the place, which were caused by the hos-
pitaHties of its inhabitants. ' '
I never saw a busier place than Chicago was at the time of our
arrival. The streets were crowded ith land . speculators, hurrying
from one sale to another. A negro, dressed up in scarlet, bearing
a scarlet flag, and riding a white horse wth housings of scarlet, an-
nounced the times of sale. At every strc'^t-corner where he stopped,
the crowd flocked round him; and it seemed as if some prevalent
mania infected the whole people. The rage for speculation might
fairly be so regarded. As the gentlemen of our party walked the
streets, store-keepers hailed them from their doors, with offers of
farms, and all manner of land-lots, advising them to speculate before
the price of land rose higher. A young lawyer, of my acquaintance
there, had realised five hundred dollars per day, the five preceding
days, by merely making out titles to land. Another friend had real-
ised in two years, ten times as much money as he had before fixed upon
as a competence for Hfe. Of course, this rapid money-making is a
merely temporary evil. A bursting of the bubble must come soon.
The absurdity of the speculation is so striking, that the wonder is
that the fever should have attained such a height as I witnessed.
The immediate occasion of the bustle which prevailed, the week we
were at Chicago, was the sale of lots, to the value of two millions of
dollars, along the course of a projected canal; and of another set,
immediately behind these. Persons not intending to game, and not
infected with mania, would endeavor to form some reasonable con-
jecture as to the ultimate value of the lots, by calculating the cost
of the canal, the risks from accident, from the possible competition
from other places, &c., and, finally, the possible profits, under the
most favorable circumstances, within so many years' purchase.
Such a calculation would serve as some sort of guide as to the amount
of purchase-mojaey to be risked. Whereas, wild land on the banks
464 K \D1NGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
of a canal, jiot yet awn marked out, was selling at Chicago for more
than rich land, well improved, in the finest part of the valley of the
Mohawk, on the banks of a canal which is already the medium of an
ahnost inestimable amount of traffic. If sharpers and gamblers were
to be the sufferers ]^y the impending crash at Chicago, no one would
feel much concerned: but they, imfortunately, are the people who en-
courage the delusion, in order to profit by it. Many a high-spirited,
but inexperienced younpj man; many a simple settler, will be ruined
for the advantage of knaves.
Others, besui^s lawyers ond speculators by trade, make a fortune
in such extraordinary times. A poor man at Chicago had a pre-emp-
tion right to some land, for w lich he paid in the morning one hundred
and fifty dollars. In the aftvjrnoon, he sold it to a friend of mine for
five thousand dollars. A poor Frenchman, married to a squaw, hac
a suit pending, when I was there, which he was likely to gain, for the
right of purchasing some land by the lake for one hundred dollars,
which would immediately become worth one million dollars.
There was much gaiety going on at Chicago, as well as business.
On the evening ox our arrival a fancy fair took place. As I was too
much fatigued to go, the ladies sent me a bouquet of prairie flowers.
There is some allowable pride in the place about its society. It is a
remarkable thing to meet such an assemblage of educated, refined,
and wealthy persons as may be found there, living in small, incon-
venient houses on the edge of a wild prairie. There is a mixture,
of course. I heard of a family of half-breeds setting up a carriage,
and wearing fine jewellery. When the present intoxication of pros-
perity passes away, some of the inhabitants will go back to the east-
ward; there will be an accession of settlers from the mechanic classes;
good houses will have been built for the richer families, and the singu-
larity of the place will subside. It will be like all the other new and
thriving lake and river ports of America. Meantime, I am glad to
have seen it in its strange early days.
IV. English and American Agriculture Compared
Superiority of American Agriculture, 18 jj^
A good view of American agriculture may be had by comparing it with
of England. Each had its advantages and disadvantages, and they are stated bg
an observant English agriculturist as follows:
» A Tour through North America. By Patrick Shirrefif (Edinburgh, 1835)
340-1, 345, 348-9-
PUBLIC LANDS AND AGRICULTURE 465 ^
In North America, extensive landholders are not common in any,
of the districts which I visited; and where they do exist, a great part
of their possessions are unproductive. The soil is chiefly cultivated
by its owners, who, in sundry respects, resemble the tenants of Scot-
land; and they often perform a great portion of the manual labour
of the farm. In many parts of the country, which has been long
settled, the farmers are opulent, participating in all the conveniences
of life; and, without passing their time in absolute idleness, hire a
good deal of labour. In the more recently settled parts, farmers have
few of the elegancies and conveniences of life, with an ample share of
its necessaries. They do not labour hard after the first three or
four years of settlement, and seem to live without much care. »
Land does not invest its owner with any privilege or status in
society.
Renters of land, or tenants, are common in many parts, and in all ,
respects rank as landholders. The terms of rent are variable. Near
towns, and in thickly-peopled districts, a small rent is paid in money,
and a lease of several years taken. In remote situations, land is
commonly let on shares from year to year. If the owner of the soil
furnishes seed and labouring animals, he gets two-thirds of the prod-
uce, when on the field, and removed from the earth. If the tenant
supplies animals and seed, the landowner gets one-third. But terms
may vary according to situation, soil, and crop.
Farm-hired men, or by whatever other name they may be dis-
tinguished, are to be had in all old settled districts, and also in many
of the new ones. In most cases their reward is ample, and their treat-
ment good, living on the same kind of fare and often associating
with their employers. A great deal of farm labour is performed by
piece-work.
The agriculture of a country is affected by local circumstances,
ajid farming in Britain and in the remote parts of America may be
considered the extremes of the art. In the one country the farmer % •
aims to assist, and in the other to rob nature. When the results
of capital and labour are low, compared with the hire of them, they are
sparingly applied to the cultivation of the soil, in which case nature
is oppressed and neglected, if I may be allowed to use such terms;
and when they are high, compared with their hire, she is aided and
caressed. Both systems are proper in the respective countries; and,
by assuming a fixed result for nature, they admit of arithmetical
demonstration. Along the eastern shores of America, manures and
a considerable portion of hired labour are applied to the cultivation
466 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
of the soil; but in remote districts manures are not used, and the
smallest indispensable quantity of labour bestowed. In the eastern
parts, the results of capital and labour enter into the productions
of the soil; in remote districts the aid of capital can scarcely be said
to have been called into action, and in both situations nature is the
chief agent. . . .
In the eastern parts of America land may be purchased and stocked
for nearly the sum an East Lothian farmer expends in stocking and
improving a farm, namely, £7 per acre. But if the land has great
local advantages, the price will be considerably higher. In the
western parts of the United States, prairie land of the best quality,
without the least obstacle to cultivation, and to any extent, may
be had. For the sum of three hundred pounds sterling a farm of
200 acres could be bought and stocked in the prairies of western
America. In East Lothian farming is a hazardous calling; in America
there is no risk attending it. In East Lothian £2000 is required to
stock a farm; in the Western States £300 will purchase and stock
one nearly of equal size. In East Lothian a farmer has mental
annoyance with bodily ease; in America he has mental ease with
personal labour. In East Lothian a young farmer commences his
career in affluence, and at middle age finds himself in poverty; in
America he begins with toil, and is in easy circumstances by middle
age. . . .
In judging then of the step of becoming an American agriculturist,
all may lay their account to undergo considerable privations at first
settlement, and lead a different life from the farmers of East Lothian.
The bountiful reward which industry receives soon enables good men
to purchase land; and it is therefore often the unsteady and idle which
hire themselves to farmers. On this account, it will be necessary
to work personally, by way of example and active superintendence.
Right thinking i)eople consider it no disgrace to labour in any part
of the world, and it is thought quite disreputable to be idle in America.
East Lothian farmers often toil mentally without remuneration ; and
the assurance that, while in America, all the fruits of a person's own
labour, assisted by generous nature, accrues to himself, will nerve
his arm and sweeten his toil. The division of labour so beautifully
effected in some of the operations of East Lothian agriculture, and
which I may be permitted to call professional luxuries, cannot be
practised at present in America. The wooden dwelling-house and
barns will at first perhai)s appear revolting, and may induce some
people to think, that, with the same privations and sarrificcs, they
PUBLIC LANDS AND AGRICULTURE 467
would have been enabled to have lived in East Lothian. Such is
not, however, the case; because the pressure on farmers arises from
a competition of numbers, which would be increased by lowering
the standard of living; and the only result of such poHcy would be
to raise the rent of land, and degrade all engaged in farming. Let
no one, however, from my representations of American farming,
entertain too sanguine hopes of success. Farming, in most parts
of the world, ranks low in the scale of professional remuneration;
and without virtue, persevering industry, and sobriety of character,
people will not likely either become wealthy or happy. In nine cases
out of ten, a man's success in life depends on his own exertions.
America presents a fertile and extensive field, and whoever does not
reap an abundant harvest, will, in all probability, find the cause of
failure in his own character. I cannot hold out an immediate or
ultimate prospect of great wealth, as the low price of produce and
high labour renders this improbable. Every person may, however,
obtain all the necessaries and most of the true comforts of life in the
fullest abundance, unharassed by the cares of the present, or appre-
hensions of the future. The pleasures of society are not likely to be
so much enjoyed in America as in Britain; but, on the other hand,
its mortifications are escaped. In every part of the world, man
ought to look to his family and himself, and not to society, for true
happiness. If abundance of the necessaries of life do not ensure
society in America, the want of abundance is almost sure to lose
society in Britain.
V. Agricultural Education and Machinery
Improvements before i860 ^
, The two important improvements in the methods of agriculture during this
period were the organization of agricultural societies and the application of
machinery to agriculture. In fact, the two went hand in hand, for the former en-
couraged with prizes and bonuses the invention of farm machinery. The intro-
duction of labor-saving machinery on the farms increased the production of the
soil and eventually freed a large part of the population for manufactures. By
the old methods the greater part of the people were required to engage in the pro-
duction of foodstuflfs, but with the coming of machinery, one worker with less
labor could produce as much as several workmen could formerly produce. These
two great developments have been well described by Charles L. Flint, a well-
known authority on American agriculture, as follows:
^ Report of the Commissioner of Agriculture for the Year 1872 (Washington,
1872), 282-4, 286-91.
468 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
During the period of the Revolution farm production was brought
to a partial stand-still, and, for some years after, it was in a state of
extreme depression. It took time to recover from the effects of the
struggle. Gradually, however, the importance of some effort to de-
velop and improve the agriculture of the country was impressed upon
the minds of the more intelligent and public-spirited of the people,
men, for the most part, who were in advance of their time. The
result of their deliberations was the formation of societies for the
encouragement of agricultural improvement. Thus the South Caro-
lina Agricultural Society was estabUshed in 1784; the Philadelphia
Society for Promoting Agriculture, in 1785; the New York (city)
Society, in 1791; the Massachusetts Society for Promoting Agricul-
ture, in 1792. These were rather city than country institutions.,
They were very slow in reaching the common people. The average
farmer of that day was not up to their standard of thought and ob-
servation. Their example, their teachings, their entreaties for aid,
their reports and papers, fell comparatively dead upon the mass of the
people. Farmers were not to be taught by men who never held the
plow. They did not want anything to do with theories. Custom
had marked out a road for them, and it was smooth and easy to
travel, and, though it might be a circle that brought up just where it
had started, it had the advantage, in the old farmer's mind, that in
it he never lost his way. It didn't require any exertion of mind.
His comfort, as well as his happiness, was based on a feeling of filial
obedience to old usage that was hereditary in his being. It was born
in the blood, and ruled him with an irresistible power. His field of
vision was bounded and narrow, and his work was strictly imitative^
so far as he could see, and in no way experimental. The old common
law, based on precedent, custom, practice, was his guide and his rule.
He would be governed by custom, not by reason. If ancient custom
was known, that was good enough for him. It wasn't for him to doubt.
To investigate would imply doubt. To investigate was to theorize.
Theory is at the bottom of all investigation, and theory was a bug-
bear in his mind. The logical result — that no improvement could
be reached without investigation — had no terrors for him. He
seldom read. The written word he received with distrust. It might
contain principles, and it wasn't principles that he cared anything
about, but practice. No matter whether founded on wisdom and
experience or not, practice was the thing.
It is probable that the events and the exciumrnts oi liie Revolu-
tion itself, with the travel, the observation, and the social intercourse
PUBLIC LANDS AND AGRICULTURE 469
which it involved, had much to do with breaking up the impregnable
barrier of prejudice and slavery to custom and precedent which ruled
so strongly in the popular mind. Great passions which reach and
stir up the lowest depths of the nation's heart have a liberalizing and
progressive influence. They excite thought and awaken a spirit of
inquiry. But that the picture is not in the least overdrawn is evi-
dent from the fact that here and there are a few specimens left to
remind us that the leaven which the early societies infused among
the people has not yet permeated the entire mass.
But time brings its changes. Something more was felt to be
needed, and a convention was held in Georgetown, in the District of
Columbia, on the 28th of November, 1809, from which grew the Co-
lumbian Agricultural Society for the Promotion of Rural and Domestic
Economy; and the first exhibition, probably, in this country, was
held by that society on the loth of May, 18 10, with the offer of liberal
premiums for the encouragement of sheep-raising, &c. Elkanah
Watson exhibited three merino sheep in Pittsfield, Massachusetts,
in the October following of the same year. It was an innovation
upon old custom, and the occasion of much ridicule and contempt
among the farmers of that day and generation, but it was the germ
of the Berkshire County Agricultural Society, whose regular exhibi-
tions began the year following, and are believed to have been the
first county exhibitions ever instituted in this country.
The Massachusetts Society held its first exhibition at Brighton
in 1816, offered a list of premiums, and instituted a plo wing-match;
but it appears to have been rather with the design of testing the
strength, training, and docility of the oxen than to improve the plow.
The plow-maker, however, happened to be there with his eyes open,
and there can be no doubt that this and similar exhibitions which
50on followed gave a new impetus to the progress of agricultural
mechanics. Improvements in the plow had begun, even before the
close of the last century. A patent had been granted for a cast-
iron plow to Charles Newbold, of Burlington, New Jersey, in 1797,
combining the mold-board, share, and land-side, all cast together,
and it was regarded by intelligent plow-makers as so great an im-
provement that Peacock, in his patent of 1807, paid the original
inventor the sum of $500 for the right to combine certain parts of
Newbold 's plow with his own. The importance of this implement
was so great as to command the attention and study of scientific
men, to improve its form and construction, and Thomas Jefferson,
in 1798, applied himself to the task, and wrote a treatise upon the
470 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
requisite form of the mold-board, according to scientific principles,
calculating the exact form and size, and especially the curvature
to lessen the friction. I have in my possession his original manu-
script of this essay, containing his drawings and calculations.
But these changes and improvements were not readily adopted
by the farming community. Their introduction was far slower than •
any new invention that promised to economize labor and do better
work would be at the present day. Many a farmer clung to his old
wooden plow, asserting that cast iron poisoned the ground and spoiled ,
the crops. He required an ocular demonstration before paying his
money for an iron plow. It was not so much the weight of the old
plow as the form of the mold-board, and the construction of the various
parts, that needed correction. Its draught was great, on account of
the excessive friction. The share and mold-board were so attached
as to make too blunt a wedge. Its action was not uniform, and it
was difficult to hold, requiring constant watchfulness and great
strength to prevent it from being thrown out of the ground. To
plow to any considerable depth it was necessary to have a man at the
beam to bear down. The mold-board w^as often shod with iron to
lessen the friction and prevent wear, but it was usually in strips,
often of uneven thickness, so that the desired effect was not always
attained. The cast-iron plow remedied these serious defects, and
secured at least some greater uniformity in construction. The modi-
fications of the mold-board, which resulted from a better understand-
ing of the true principles of construction, have enabled the farmer
to do vastly better work, and a greater amount of it in the same time,
and at a less expenditure of strength, and to reap larger crops as the
result of his labor, while the cost of the implement, considering its
greater efficiency and its durability, is less by half, probably, than the
old wooden plow.
There can be no doubt that the saving to the country from these
improvements in the plow, within the last century, amounts to many
millions of dollars a year in the cost of teams, and some millions in
the cost of plows, or that the aggregate of crops has been increased
by them many millions of bushels. The plow has also been modified
to adapt it to a much greater variety of soils. In the mode of manu-
facture, too, a vast improvement has taken place. Half a century
ago it was made sometimes on the farm, sometimes by the village
blacksmith, and the wheelwright. The work is now concentrated in
fewer establishments which make it a siK'ciaky. In Massachusetts,
for example, in 1845, there were seventy-three plow-manufactories,
PUBLIC LANDS AND AGRICULTURE 471
making 61,334 plows and other instruments annually, while in 1855
the number of establishments had decreased to twenty-two, which
made 152,686 plows, valued at $707,175.86, annually. A very large
plow-factory was established in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, in 1829,
and, as early as 1836, it was manufacturing as many as a hundred
plows a day, by the aid of steam-power, to supply chiefly the southern
market. This establishment first made a hill-side revolving-beam
plow, and the iron-center plow, and more recently it has made a vast
number of steel plows, adapted to the prairie soils of the West. An-
other factory, in the same city, as early as 1836, made plows at the
average rate of 4,000 a year. The two factories made 34,000
plows a year, valued at $174,000. There are now many other still
larger factories, some of which make from ten to twelve hundred
different patterns, adapted to every variety of soil and circum-
stance. . . .
But perhaps the most important of modern agricultural inventions
are the grain-harvesters, the reapers, the mowers, the thrashers, and x
the horse-rakes. The sickle, which was in almost universal use till
within a very recent date, is undoubtedly one of the most ancient
of all our farming implements. Reaping by the use of it was always
slow and laborious, while from the fact than many of 'our grains would
ripen at the same time, there was a liability to loss before they could
be gathered, and practically there was a vastly greater loss from this
cause than there is at the present time. It is not, therefore, too
much to say that the successful introduction of the reaper into the
grain-fields of this country has added many millions of dollars to the
value of our annual harvests, by enabling us to secure the whole
product, and by making it possible for the farmer to increase the
area of his wheat-fields, with a certainty of being able to gather the
crop. Nothing was more surprising to the mercantile community of
Europe than the fact that we could continue to export such vast quan-
tities of wheat and other breadstuffs through the midst of the late
rebellion, with a million or two of able-bodied men in arms. The
secret of it was the general use of farm-machinery. The number of
two-horse reapers in operation throughout the country, in the harvest
of 1 86 1, performed an amount of work equal to about a million of men.
The result was that our capacity for farm production was not mate-
rially disturbed.
The credit of the practical application of the principles involved
in this class of machines undoubtedly belongs to our own ingenious
mechanics; for though somewhat similar machines were invented in
472 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
England and Scotland many years ago, they had never been proved
to be efficient on the field, and had never gained the confidence of the
farmers, even in their neighborhood; while the patent issued to
Obed Hussey, of Cincinnati, in 1833, and another issued to Mc-
Cormick of Virginia, in 1834, not only succeeded in the trials to which
they were subjected, but gained a wide and permanent reputation.
Many patents had been issued in this country previously, the first
having been as early as 1803, but they had not proved successful.
Hussey 's machine was introduced into New York and Illinois in 1834,
into Missouri in 1835, into Pennsylvania in 1837, and in the next
year the inventor established himself in Baltimore. McCormick's
machine had been worked as early as 1831, but it was afterwards
greatly improved, and became a source of an immense fortune to the
inv^entor. He took out a second patent in 1845, fifteen other machines
having been patented after the date of his first papers, including that
of the Ketchum, in 1844, which gained a wide reputation.
The first trial of reapers, partaking of a national character, was
held under the auspices of the Ohio State Board of Agriculture in 1852,
when twelve different machines and several different mowers were
entered for competition. There was no striking superiority, accord-
ing to the report of the judges, in any of the machines. A trial had
been held at the show of the New York State Agricultural Society,
at Buffalo, in 1848, but the large body of farmers who had witnessed
it were not prepared to admit that the work of the machines was good
enough to be tolerated in comparison with the hand-scythe. Some
thought they might possibly work in straight, coarse grass, but in
finer grasses they were sure to clog. The same society instituted
trial of reapers and mowers at Geneva in 1852, when nine machines
competed as reapers and seven as mowers. Only two or three of the
latter were capable of equaling the common scythe in the quality
of work they did, and not one of them all, when brought to a stand
in the grass, could start again without backing to get up speed. AD
the machines had a heavy side-draught, some of them to such ar
extent as to wear seriously on the team. None of them could turr
about readily within a reasonable space, and all were liable to tear upj
the sward in the operation. The old Manning, patented in 1831
and the Ketchum machines were the only ones that were capable oil
doing work that was at all satisfactory. One or two of the reap>en|
in this trial did fair work, and the judges decided that, in comparison
with the hand-cradle, they showed a saving of S^i cents per acrc[
Here was some giiin riTtninly, a litflc po^^itivr advance, but still m(
PUBLIC LANDS AND AGRICULTURE 473
of the reapers, as well as the mowers, did very inferior work. The
draught in them all was very heavy, while some of the best of them had
a side-draught that was destructive to the team.
The inventive geniusr of the country was stimulated by these trials
to an extraordinary degree of activity. Patents began to multiply
rapidly. Local trials took place every year in various parts of the
country to test the merits of the several machines. The great Inter-
national Exposition at Paris in 1855 was an occasion not to be over-
looked by an enterprising inventor, and the American machines,
imperfect as they were at that time, were brought to trial there in
competition with the world. The scene of this trial was on a field
of oats about forty miles from Paris, each machine having about an
acre to cut. Three machines were entered for the first trial, one
American, one English, and a third from Algiers, all at the same
time raking as well as cutting. The American machine did its work
in twenty-two minutes, the English in sixty-six, and the Algerian in
seventy-two.
At a subsequent trial on the same piece, three other machines
were entered, of American, English, and French manufacture, when
the American machine did its work in twenty-two minutes, while
the two others failed. "The successful competitor on this occasion,"
says a French journal, "did its work in the most exquisite manner,
not leaving a single stalk ungathered, and it discharged the grain in
the most perfect shape, as if placed by hand, for the binders. It
finished its piece most gloriously." The contest was finally narrowed
down to three machines, all American. Two machines were after-
wards converted from reapers into mowers, one making the change
in one minute, the other in twenty. Both performed their task to
the astonishment and satisfaction of a large concourse of spectators,
and the judges could hardly restrain their enthusiasm, but cried out,
"Good, good!" "Well done!" while the excitable people who looked
on hurrahed for the American reaper, crying out, "That's the ma-
chine!" "That's the machine!" The reporter of a French agri-
cultural journal said: "All the laurels, we are free to confess, have
been gloriously won by Americans, and this achievement cannot be
looked upon with indifference, as it plainly foreshadows the ultimate
destiny of the New World."
Five years after the Geneva trial there was a general desire to
have another on a scale of magnificence that should bring out all the
prominent reapers and mowers of the country. The United States
Agricultural Society accordingly instituted a national trial at Syracuse,
474
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
New York, in 1857. More than forty mowers and reapers entered,
and were brought to test on the field. It was soon apparent that strik-
ing improvements had been made since the meeting at Geneva. The
draught had been very materially lessened in Yiearly all the machines,
though the side-draught was still too great in some of them. Most
of the machines could now cut fine and thick grass without clogging,
and there was a manifest progress in them, but of the nineteen that
competed as mowers, only three could start in fine grass without
backing to get up speed. The well-known Buckeye, patented only
the year before, won its first great triumph here, and carried off the
first prize. . . .
The horse hay-rake was invented at an earUer date than the
mowing-machine. It has been used in this country nearly seventy
years, and the saving by its use, sixty years ago, was estimated to be
the labor of six men in the same time. The work to be performed
in raking hay, though slow, is comparatively light. It does not
require the exertion of a very great amount of strength. It is just
such kind of work where the application of animal power becomes of
the greatest advantage, because it multiplies the efficiency of the hand
many times. The same thing is noticed in the use of the hand-drills
for sowing small seeds, the tedder for turning and spreading hay, and
in other similar operations. The labor of a good horse-rake is equal
to that of eight or ten men for the same time, and from twenty to
thirty acres a day can be gathered by a single horse and driver, and
that without overexertion. In the economy of labor the horse-rake
must be regarded as second only in importance to the mower and
the reaper, and is considered as essential upon the farm as the plow
itself.
The tedder is another invention of still more recent date. With
the introduction of the mower, by which grass could be cut so rapidly,
and the horse-rake, by which it could be gathered more rapidly than
ever before, there was still wanting some means by which it could be
cured proportionally quick, something to complete and round out the
new system, as it were, to make the revolution of the process of hay-
making entire. Various forms of the tedder had been patented and
used in England, but they were too heavy and cumbersome for
American use, and it was left to our own inventors to meet and over-
come the mechanical obstacles in the way of success here. This they
have done, and we have so far economized labor in this direction,
that the tedder is now regarded as of nearly equal importance with
the mower and the horse-rake.
PUBLIC LANDS AND AGRICULTURE 475
To these appliances for lightening and shortening the labors of
haying, have been added many forms of the horse-fork for unloading
and mowing away hay in the barn or upon the stack. Few machines
have met with greater popular favor than the horse pitchfork, for it
saves not only the most violent strain upon the muscles, but econo-
mizes time, which, in the hurry of haying, is often of the utmost
importance. The American hand-forks had been brought so near
perfection, by their high finish, lightness, and strength, as to leave
little to be desired, but the horse-fork has been so generally intro-
duced, as, to a considerable extent, to supersede their use.
While these vast improvements have been going on with the
other implements of the farm, the improvement in machines for
thrashing grain has been rapidly progressing, till they have reached
a wonderful degree of perfection. Most of us can remember when the
old-fashioned flail was heard upon almost every barn-floor in the
country. Here and there was a case where the grain was trodden
out by cattle, with an amazing waste of time and labor. Compare
those slow methods with the process, widely known at the present
day, by which a horse-power or steam-power thrasher not only sepa-
rates the grain but winnows it, measures it, bags it, ready for market,
and carries away the straw to the stack at the same operation, and
all with a rapidity truly astonishing. As early as the Paris Exposition
of 1855 the victory was won by an American machine. To ascertain
the comparative rapidity and economy of thrashing, sLx men were
set to work at thrashing with flails. In one hour they thrashed 36
liters of wheat. In the same time Pitt's American machine thrashed
740 liters; Clayton's English machine thrashed 410 liters; Duvoir's
French machine thrashed 250 liters; Pinet's French machine thrashed
150 liters. Speaking of this trial a French journal said: ''This Ameri-
can machine literally devoured the sheaves of wheat. The eye can-
not follow the work which is effected between the entrance of the
sheaves and the end of the operation. It is one of the greatest results
which it is possible to attain. The impression which the spectacle
produced on the Arab chiefs was profound." Good as that machine
was at that time, it has been greatly improved since then; and it
is a fact that wherever our first-class machines have come into com-
petition with those of European manufacture, they have invariably
proved themselves superior in point of simplicity, rapidity, and per-
fection of work.
Nor has the progress in the improvement of other indispensable
machines of the farm been less marked and important. The smaller
476 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
implements have felt the impress of the mechanical genius of the
age. The corn-sheller has been brought to such perfection as to sepa-
rate the corn from the ear with great rapidity and with the appUcation
of Httle power. It has been adapted to horse power also, and to dif-
ferent sections of the country, where different varieties of corn are
raised, and to shell one or two ears at the same time. Its economy:
of time and labor is such as, upon large farms where the product
is large, to pay for itself in a single year.
The hay-cutter is another machine of modern invention. Wher-
ever a large stock of cattle is kept, especially where a considerable
number of horses are wintered, it is often thought to be good economy
to feed out more or less of the coarser feeding substances of the farm,
as straw, corn-stover, the poorer qualities of hay, &c., by mixing them,
either with the better qualities of hay or with some sort of concen-
trated food, like meal. The hay-cutter is adjustable so as to cut at
different lengths, according to the wants of the stock for which it
designed. The point is to cut short and with perfect regularity, anc
when this quality is attained in a machine, uniting strength, simplicity
durability, and safety to the operator, it is estimated that there
a gain of about 25 per cent, in the economy of feeding, in the increas*
of thrift secured, and the positive advantage to be derived in th
manure. There is a difference of opinion upon this point, to be sure
but notwithstanding that, the use of some form of the hay and stra\
cutter has become nearly universal and is generally regarded as quit
indispensable upon most well-conducted farms. Machines for thi
purpose are made to be worked by hand, upon small farms, and b
horse or steam power upon larger ones, where they are capable c
reducing to chaff a ton and a half of hay or straw per hour.
VI. Views on Agriculture
A. Southern and Northern Agrictdture Compared ^ 1840^ iSjO^ i860
The United States, before the war, was essentially an agricultural natia
Both the north and the south had their chief interests in the soil, and any acceler
tion or retardation, therefore, of its development along this Une was of the greate
importance. The relative importance of the two sections of the country was
follows :
Hunt's Merchants* Magazine (New York, i860), XLII, 168-70.
PUBLIC LANDS AND AGRICULTURE
EXPORTABLE PRODUCTS OF THE SOUTH.
477
Naval stores
Rice
Tobacco
Sugar
Cotton
Total . .
Number hands
Product per
hand
$ 292,000
1,714,923
8,118,188
1,500,000
26,309,000
$37,934,111
1,543,688
$24^
1830
t> 321,019
1,986,824
8,833,112
3,000,000
34,084,883
$48,225,838
2,009,053
$22^
1840
$ 602,520
1,942,076
9,883,957
5,200,000
74,640,307
$92,268,860
2,487,355
^7
1850
> 1,142,713
2,631,557
9,951,023
14,796,150
101,834,616
$130,356,059
3,119,509
$43^
1859
3,695,474
2,207,148
21,074,038
31,455,241
204,104,923
$262,546,824
4,000,000
$65.6
The figures for naval stores, rice, and tobacco are the export
values of the crops. The sugar and cotton are the values of the whole
production.
The result is, that the value per head of these articles, which in-
creased 16 per cent from 1840 to 1850, increased 50 per cent in the
last nine years. It must not, however, be supposed that this was all
the products of that section. On the other hand, the production of
those exported articles formerly involved the purchase of food for the
hands employed in the production. At present a large portion of
food is raised by the same hands in addition. This is a most inter-
esting feature of Southern industry, yet but little understood. There
have been no general returns of production since 1850, but we may
compare the products of leading articles as given by the census of
1850:-
Area
Population
Wheat bush.
Corn
Swine
Horses I
Mules )
Hay
Cows
Oxen
Other cattle
1840
North
54,748,284
124,988,073
10,084,970
2,097,307
9,402,097
7,569,022
South
[850
30,074,998
252,543,802
16,216,323
2,238,362
846,111
7,402,564
North
South
1,578,737
871,458
13,527,229
9,664,656
72,607,129
27,878,815
243,013,603
349,057,501
10,343,265
20,008,948
{ 2,284,344
( 40,341
2,052,375
518,990
12,815,484
1,023,158
(3,481,617
2,833,338
] 878,366
822,078
( 4,224,628
5,469,441
478 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
These figures present facts somewhat different from the popular
idea, which is, that for articles of general agriculture the North and
West are much in excess of the South. The leading items of food
and labor at the South, as at the North and West, are cattle, horses,
mules, swine, and corn; "bacon and corn cakes," "hog and hominy"
are the staples. Now the census figures show that in addition to the
great export crops the South raises far more corn and pork than the
other sections. The South had, in 1850, absolutely double the num-
ber of swine that the other sections held. It raised 109,000,000
bushels more corn than the whole North and West. It raised 100
bushels of corn for every black hand. The wheat was less in actual
quantity; but there were raised five bushels of wheat for every white
person, which is the same ratio as at the North. The South had more
cattle of all kinds than the other section, and it is enabled to main-
tain them, because it is not compelled to house or make hay for the
winter fodder, which are heavy drafts upon Northern labor imposed
by the climate. The South had horses and mules, 2,571,365, and the
North 2,324,685, an excess of 246,680 in favor of the South, and yet
the latter States raised only 10 per cent of the hay that was raised at
the North. Allowing the actual cost of making hay, in labor, &c.,
to be $5 per ton, the same number of cattle cost the North $44,000,000
more to keep them than at the South. The hay expense is, however,
shared with the cattle of all kinds. These must be fed in the winter
at the North, and that is not required at the South. In all that con-
cerns agricultural prosperity the South has a decided advantage.
The larger production of hay at the North has sometimes been appealed
to as an evidence of its greater agricultural wealth, whereas it is only
an evidence of a more disadvantageous climate. The Southern cattle
obtain the same quantity of food as those of the North, that is, a
quantity suflScient for their wants, but they obtain it themselves.
Nature has it always ready for them. At the North, on the other
hand, men have to cut the food in the summer, cure and preserve it
for the winter, when the Northern animals could not get it for them-
selves. Analogous to this is the Northern coal industry. The South
produces comparatively a small quantity, and needs but little in pro-
portion to the requirements of a Northern winter. If the $35,000,000
worth of coal mined at the North is an evidence of wealth, it is also an
evidence of the exactions of the climate. Nearly all the industry
expended in coal mining and hay making is a tax upon Northern life,
rather than an evidence of wealth. That j)()rti()n of coal which is
applied to transportation and niaiuifactures is, of course, an element
PUBLIC LANDS AND AGRICULTURE
479
of production, but that used as fuel is a tax. The labor that, with a
climate as severe as that at the North, would be required at the South
to supply fuel and fodder, is now expended in raising cotton, sugar,
and rice for export. If we compare the weight and value of the articles,
cotton, butter, cheese, tobacco, sugar, wool, rice, hemp, and flax,
North and South, the results are as follows: —
Nine articles Quantity Value
Northern States lbs 2,292,054,661 $ 72,294,524
Southern States " 2,896,100,602 142,480,235
Excess at the South $70,195,71 1
In these figures we find how rapidly the Southern States have
concentrated within themselves the means of feeding the large work-
ing population, while they have been enabled to throw off from the
same working force an annual surplus of those articles suitable for
export; and in doing this it has more distinctly marked its position
as the sole source for the supply of that great raw material for human
clothing, the manufacture of which occupies so large a proportion of
the population and capital of England and Europe. Not only the
quantity of cotton per hand is as we have seen increasing, but its
money value advances in the ratio of the spread of the markets for
the goods and the prosperity of the people who buy in those markets.
The production of this article increases in the ratio of the natural
increase of the hands and of the larger quantities that they can raise.
The progress of the United States crop has been in quantity, and in
the average value at Liverpool, in the two last periods of eight years,
as follows: —
Bales Ave. price Value
i844ai85i 18,132,293 5^ $ 875,789,519
1852 a 1859 25,488,014 6id. 1,436,587,562
Increase 7,355, 79i ••.• $560,798,043
Such has been the vast results of this cotton product in the last
eight years; an increase of 40 per cent in quantity was attended by
an increase of 20 per cent in price, and there results an increase of 70
per cent in net proceeds. The next eight years indicate a still more
considerable progress in the same direction.
48o READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
B. Agriculture about i860 ^
A good account of American agriculture at the outbreak of the Civil War is
given by an English authority as follows:
A large portion of the United States still remains unculti-
vated, mostly because it has not yet been occupied. Land is still so
plentiful in proportion to the population and capital, that rent has
scarcely begun to have any existence, the farmer being in almost
every case proprietor of the land which he cultivates.
The science of farming has been so much extended and improved
of late years, that it is gradually giving to the United States a rank
as one of the most carefully tilled countries in the world. It appears
from the returns of the last census, that the ratio of the increase of
the principal agricultural products of the United States has more
than kept pace with the increase of the population, and a marked
improvement has taken place in the more important agricultural
operations.
The spirit of inquiry and enterprise in agriculture was never more
general or encouraging than at the present time. Societies have been
estabUshed in all the States for the purpose of collecting and rendering
as useful as possible all the information relative to agriculture, and
in Massachusetts a department of the State Legislature has been
organized for the superintendence of the agricultural interests of the
State.
The Middle States, especially New York, have attained a high
degree of improvement, consequent upon the efforts made to raise
the standard of agriculture.
The Western States are more strictly agricultural than any other
section, and Chicago and other towns owe their existence entirely to
the mammoth trade in Indian corn, wheat, and other farm products
supplied by the surrounding country.
The Southern States, while their main products are cotton, rice,
tobacco, and sugar, also produce cereals in large quantities.
The farms in the States and Territories contain in the aggregate
163,261,389 acres improved, and 246,508,244 acres unimproved lands.
The unimproved land consists of that which is occupied and necessary
to the enjoyment of the improved, though not itself reclaimed; it
does not include meadow land. The average size of farms is 203
* Descriptive Handbook of America. By George Washington Hacon
William George Larkins*( London, [1866]), 42-9.
PUBLIC LANDS AND AGRICULTURE 481
acres, the greatest average being in California (4466 acres), and the
smallest in Utah (51 acres). The greatest average values of farms are
in the District of Columbia, Louisiana, and New Jersey; and the small-
est average values in Utah, New Mexico, and Arkansas.
The average value of land per acre in New England is $20.27 c;
in the Middle States, $28.07 c; in the Southern States, $5.34 c; in
the South- Western States, $6.26 c; in the North- Western States,
$11,390.; in California and the organized Territories, $1,890.; in
Texas, $1.44 c. The proportion of the improved land to the whole in
the Free States is 14.72 per cent.; in the Slave States, 10.09 per cent.;
in the United States, 7.71 per cent. The proportion of occupied
land to the whole in the Free States is 28.56 per cent.; in the Slave
States, 33.17 per cent.; in the United States, 20.02 per cent. The
average value of occupied land per acre in the Free States is $19;
in the Slave States, $6.09 c. ; in the United States, $1 1.14 c.
In general it may be said that the Middle and Western States are
most productive in wheat, rye, and oats; the Southern and Western
in Indian corn; and the Southern in cotton, sugar, tobacco, and rice.
Wool and Irish potatoes are raised principally north of lat 34°; to-
bacco between 34° and 41°; barley, apples, and pears, north of 38°;
hemp, flax, and hops, north of 34°; cotton between 31° and 36°; sugar
south of 31°.
The quantity of wheat grown in 1859 amounted to 171,183,381
bushels. In many States the quantity grown has exceeded the means
of ready transportation, or the demands of the market. It is, however,
to the extended cultivation of spring wheat in the North- Western
States, that the increase — which has been at the rate of 70 per cent,
in ten years — is due. The greatest wheat-producing State is Illinois;
then come Wisconsin, Indiana, Ohio, Virginia, Pennsylvania, New
York, Iowa, and Michigan. The prairie States yield the largest
crops.
Maize, or Indian corn, furnishing at once food for man, food for
beast, and manure for the land, is cultivated in every State and Terri-
tory of the Union, and is undoubtedly the popular crop, receiving the
distinctive name of "corn." It is less liable to failure than any other.
In 1859, the crop was 830,541,707 bushels, showing an increase of
40 per cent, since 1849. A large quantity is shipped to Great Britain,
and every year increases the demand.
Barley, oats, rye, buckwheat, and flax, are grown in every part of
the United States — principally in New York. Hemp is chiefly raised
in New York, Kentucky, and Missouri. The total product for i860
(
482 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
being 83,000 tons of dew-rotted hemp, and about 4000 tons water-
rotted.
Cotton, the great staple of the Union, is chiefly a product of the
South. It is the produce of the herbaceous or annual cotton plant,
and is of two kinds — the Sea Island or long staple, and the upland or
short staple. The former, which is of superior quality, is grown
chiefly in the Carolinas and Georgia, on the Atlantic, and in some
parts of the State of Texas. Cotton was first planted in the United
States in or about 1787, and was first exported in small quantities
in 1 790. Since then its culture has become enormous, and the rapidity
with which it has been developed is truly wonderful. In the beginning
of the present century, the annual exportation was less than 5000
bales, in 1859 it had increased to 5,196,944 bales, of 400 pounds each.
The whole crop is the product of thirteen States, but is chiefly ob-
tained from eight of them. Immense as is the quantity produced,
the demand is equal to the supply. The civil war has led to a tem-
porary cessation of the trade, which, now that peace is restored, will
doubtless speedily regain its activity. Prior to the production of
cotton in such vast quantities in the more Southern States, it was
extensively cultivated for domestic purposes in North Carolina, Vir-
ginia, Maryland, Delaware, and Southern Illinois; and it is not
improbable that its cultivation may be re-established in some of
these States, with profit to the producer and advantage to the con-
sumer. The number of plantations in which upwards of five bales
were produced was, in the year 1859, 74,031.
The dairy products of the United States are large. Considerable
quantities are shipped yearly to Great Britain. The quantity ol
butter produced in the year 1859-60 was set down at 460,509,854
pounds; and the production of cheese reached K)5,875,i35 pounds.
Although large quantities of sugar and molasses are imported
into the United States, the product of cane sugar in 1859 was 302,205
hogsheads; and of molasses 16,337,080 gallons — Louisiana being thf
State where the great bulk of American sugar is produced. A largt
quantity of sugar is obtained from several species of the maple tree
that yielding the richest juice being the rock or sugar maple. Th<
manufacture is said to have originated in New England in 1752, anc
extended from thence into the North-Eastern States, where the trei
principally abounds. It is found in beautiful groves, called suga:
orchards; and in the months of February and March, when the day
grow warm and the nights are frosty, the trees are bored with augut
about two feet from the ground, and from the holes thus made
PUBLIC LANDS AND AGRICULTURE 483
sap exudes, and is collected in wooden troughs, and boiled on the spot.
The quantity of maple sugar made in 1859 was 302,205 hogs-heads.
Sorghum, a species of grass, commonly known as Indian millet,
produces a saccharine juice, which in 1856 began to attract attention.
In 1859, less than four years from its introduction, the plant had be-
come a most important agricultural staple. It thrives wherever
Indian corn will grow. It may be cultivated in the same manner.
'When fully grown, it is from 6 to 18 feet high; the stalks of i to 2
inches diameter. The stalks yield on an average about 50 per cent.
of their weight in juice, or, to the acre, from 150 to 400 gallons, and
about 12 per cent, of sugar. Excellent rum is made from the seeds.
In the production of tobacco, every State and Territory has a
share, the principal coming from Virginia, Kentucky, and Maryland,
where it has been the staple since their first settlement; and it is also
extensively grown in Kentucky, Ohio, Missouri, and other States.
Besides the quantities required for domestic use, large amounts are
exported. Several of the Northern States are showing a considerable
increase in the growth of this staple. In 1859, the total produce was
429,390,771 pounds. There are upwards of 15,745 plantations on
which 3000 pounds or more are raised.
The hay crop of 1859 was 19,129,128 tons. This crop is mainly
confined to the Northern States. In the Southern States, the weather
is so mild as to allow cattle to graze during the greater portion of the
year, rendering a hay harvest less necessary. The estimated value
of the above crop is upwards of $150,000,000.
Rice was first cultivated in South Carolina in 1694, and four years
afterwards, 60 tons were shipped to England. Since that time, it
has been so successsfuUy culivated, that in i860 it reached 190 millions
of pounds. South Carolina and Georgia are the principal producers
out of the sixteen States in which it is grown. A large amount is
exported.
Hops are principally cultivated in New York, though every State
and Territory, with the exception of Florida, New Mexico, and Da-
cotah, contributed to the crop of i860, which amounted to upwards
of 10 millions of pounds.
Potatoes are raised in every part of the Union, the Irish potato
principally in the Northern, and the sweet potato chiefly in the
Southern section. The yield for i860 was upwards of no millions
of bushels of the former, and 35 millions of the former [latter?]
The last returns upon the subject of wine making show a large
increase in an article which promises to become one of great com-
484 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
mercial value. The wine culture has increased in a number of States,
but more particularly in Ohio, California, and Kentucky. Th
three States made nearly one million of the 1,860,008 gallons reporu m
in i860.
The orchard products of the United States consist principally
of apples and pears, of which the value in i860 was nearly 20 millions j
of dollars, showing an increase in ten years of about 12 millions o]
dollars; an increase owing to the great attention which has been
paid to the introduction and cultivation of improved varieties o]
fruit, and the processes of preservation by artificial means, which now
employ a,large amount of capital .
The number of acres devoted to the different crops in i860 were —
hay and pasturage, 33,000,000; Indian corn, 31,000,000; wheat,
11,000,000; oats, 7,500,000; cotton, 5,000,000; rye, 1,200,000; peas
and beans, 1,000,000; Irish potatoes, 1,000,000; sweet potatoes,
750,000; buck- wheat, 600,000; tobacco, 400,000; sugar, 400,000;
barley, 300,000; rice, 175,000; hemp, 110,000; flax, 100,000; or-
chards, 500,000; gardens, 500,000; vineyards, 250,000; miscel-
laneous, 1,000,000.
The largest average crop per acre of wheat, was in Massachusetts,
16 bushels; the smallest, in Georgia, 5 bushels. Of rye, largest,
Ohio, 25 bushels; smallest, Virginia, 5 bushels. Of Indian corn,
largest, Connecticut, 40 bushels; smallest, South Carolina, 11 bushels.
Of oats, largest, Iowa, 36 bushels; smallest. North Carohna, ic
bushels. Of rice, Florida, 1850 lbs., South Carohna, 1750 lbs., Lou-
isiana, 1400 lbs. Of tobacco, largest, Missouri, 775 lbs.; of seed
cotton, largest, Texas, 750 lbs.; of Irish potatoes, largest, Texas.
250 bushels; smallest, Alabama, 60 bushels; of sweet potatoes, largest
Georgia, 400 bushels.
The value of the live stock and domestic animals forms an im-
portant item in the statistics of the country. A most satisfactoi^
increase in the number and varieties is shown by the last returns
The total value of the live/stock was, in i860, $1,107,490,216. Th<
horses numbered 6,115,458; asses and mules, 1,129,553; working
oxen, 2,240,075; milch cows, 8,728,862; other cattle, 14,671,400
swine, 32,555,367. The number of sheep returned in the las-
census of i860 was 23,317,756, and the amount of wool 60,511,34^
lbs. In addition to the number of sheep just given, it was reportec
that about 1,505,810 were not included in the returns, being ownei
by other than farmers. The total increase of sheep in ten years
i»S94,536.
CHAPTER XV
CURRENCY, BANKING, AND STATE DEBTS, 1791-1860
I. The First United States Bank
A. Hamilton's Views on the Bank, lygo ^
Among Alexander Hamilton's plans for placing the new government on a
sound financial basis, none was more important than the one which had for its
end the establishment of a United States Bank. Accordingly, in 1790, he sub-
mitted to Congress a plan for such a bank, and gave his reasons for his act as
follows:
The establishment of banks in this country seems to be recom-
mended by reasons of a peculiar nature. Previously to the Revolu-
tion, circulation was in a great measure carried on by paper emitted
by the several local governments. In Pennsylvania alone, the quan-
tity of it was near a million and a half of dollars. This auxiliary may
be said to be now at an end. And it is generally supposed that
there has been, for some time past, a deficiency of circulating medium.
How far that deficiency is to be considered as real or imaginary, is
not susceptible of demonstration; but there are circumstances and
appearances, which, in relation to the country at large, countenance
the supposition of its reality.
The circumstances are, besides the fact just mentioned respecting
paper emissions, the vast tracts of waste land, and the little advanced
states of manufactures. The progressive settlement of the former,
while it promises ample retribution, in the generation of future re-
sources, diminishes or obstructs, in the mean time, the active wealth
of the country. It not only draws off a part of the circulating money,
and places it in a more passive state, but it diverts, into its own chan-
nels, a portion of that species of labor and industry which would other-
wise be employed in furnishing materials for foreign trade, and which,
by contributing to a favorable balance, would assist the introduction
of specie. In the early periods of new settlements, the settlers not
^ Legislative and Documentary History of the Bank of the United States, etc.
(Washington, 1832), 23-5, 28-9.
486 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
only furnish no surplus for exportation, but they consume a part of
that which is produced by the labor of others. The same thing is a
cause that manufactures do not advance, or advance slowly. And,
notwithstanding some hypotheses to the contrary, there are many
things to induce a suspicion, that the precious metals will not abound
in any country which has not mines, or variety of manufactures.
They have been sometimes acquired by the sword; but the modern
system of war has expelled this resource, and it is one upon which it
is to be hoped the United States will never be inclined to rely.
The appearances alluded to are, greater prevalency of direct barter
in the more interior districts of the country which, however, has been
for some time past gradually lessening, and greater difficulty, gener-
ally, in the advantageous alienation of improved real estate, which,
also, has of late diminished, but is still seriously felt in different parts
of the Union. The difficulty of getting money, which has been a
general complaint, is not added to the number, because it is the
complaint of all times, and one in which imagination must ever have
too great scope to permit an appeal to it.
If the supposition of such a deficiency be in any degree founded,
and some aid to circulation be desirable, it remains to inquire what
ought to be the nature of that aid.
The emitting of paper money by the authority of Government
is wisely prohibited to the individual States by the national con-
stitution, and the spirit of that prohibition ought not to be disregarded
by the Government of the United States. Though paper emissions,
under a general authority, might have some advantages not appli-
cable, and be free from some disadvantages which are applicable to
the like emissions by the States, separately, yet they are of a nature
so liable to abuse — and, it may even be affirmed, so certain of being
abused — that the wisdom of the Government will be shown, in never
trusting itself with the use of so seducing and dangerous an ex-pedient.
In times of tranquillity, it might have no ill consequence; it might
even perhaps be managed in a way to be productive of good; but, in|
great and trying emergencies, there is almost a moral certainty of its!
becoming mischievous. The stamping of paper is an operation so|
much easier than the laying of taxes, that a government in the prac-
tice of paper emissions, would rarely fail, in any such emergency, taj
indulge itself too far in the employment of that resource, to avoid
much as possible one less auspicious to present popularity. If it]
should not even be carried so far as to be rendered an absolute bubble,]
it would at least be likely to be extended to a degree which would oc(
CURRENCY, BANKING, AND STATE DEBTS 487
sion an inflated and artificial state of things, incompatible with the
regular and prosperous course of the political economy.
Among other material differences between a paper currency, issued
by the mere authority of government, and one issued by a bank,
payable in coin, is this: that, in the first case, there is no standard to
which an appeal can be made, as to the quantity which will only satisfy,
or which will surcharge the circulation; in the last, that standard
results from the demand. If more should be issued than is necessary,
it will return upon the bank. Its emissions, as elsewhere intimated,
must always be in a compound ratio to the fund and the demand;
whence it is evident, that there is a limitation in the nature of the
thing; while the discretion of the government is the only measure of
the extent of the emissions, by its own authority.
This consideration further illustrates the danger of emissions of
that sort, and the preference which is due to bank paper.
The payment of the interest of the public debt, at thirteen dif-
ferent places, is a weighty reason, peculiar to our immediate situation,
for desiring a bank circulation. Without a paper in general currency,
equivalent to gold and silver, a considerable proportion of the specie
of the country must always be suspended from circulation, and left
to accumulate, preparatory to each day of payment; and as often
as one approaches, there must in several cases be an actual trans-
portation of the metals, at both expense and risk, from their natural
and proper reservoirs, to distant places. This necessity will be felt
very injuriously to the trade of some of the States; and will embarrass,
not a little, the operations of the treasury in those States. It will also
obstruct those negotiations, between different parts of the Union,
by the instrumentality of treasury bills, which have already afforded
valuable accommodations to trade in general.
Assuming it, then, as a consequence, from what has been said,
that a national bank is a desirable institution, two inquiries emerge:
Is there no such institution, already in being, which has a claim to
that character, and which supersedes the propriety or necessity of
another? If there be none, what are the principles upon which one
ought to be established?
There are at present three banks in the United States: that of
North America, established in the city of Philadelphia; that of New
York, established in the city of New York; that of Massachusetts,
established in the town of Boston. Of these three, the first is the only
one which has at any time had a direct relation to the Government
of the United States.
488 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
The Bank of North America originated in a resolution of Congress
of the 26th of May, 1781, founded upon a proposition of the Super-
intendent of Finance, which was afterwards carried into execution by
an ordinance of the 31st of December following, entitled "An ordi-
nance to incorporate the subscribers to the Bank of North America."
The aid afforded to the United States by this institution, during
the remaining period of the war, was of essential consequence; and its
conduct towards them since the peace, has not weakened its title to
their patronage and favor. So far, its pretensions to the character
in question are respectable; but there are circumstances which mili-
tate against them, and considerations which indicate the propriety
of an establishment on different principles.
The directors of this bank, on behalf of their constituents, have
since accepted and acted under a new charter from the State of Penn-
sylvania, materially variant from their original one, and which so
narrows the foundation of the institution, as to render it an incom-
petent basis for the extensive purposes of a national bank. . . .
The order of the subject leads next to an inquiry into the principles
upon which the national bank ought to be organized.
The situation of the United States naturally inspires a wish that
the form of the institution could admit of a plurality of branches.
But various considerations discourage from pursuing this idea. The
complexity of such a plan would be apt to inspire doubts, which might
deter from adventuring in it. And the practicability of a safe and
orderly administration, though not to be abandoned as desperate,
cannot be made so manifest in perspective, as to promise the removal
of those doubts, or to justify the Government in adopting the idea as
an original experiment. The most that would seem advisable, on
this point, is to insert a provision which may lead to it hereafter, if
experience shall more clearly demonstrate its utility, and satisfy those
who may have the direction, that it may be adopted with safety.
It is certain that it would have some advantages, both peculiar and
important. Besides more general accommodation, it would lessen
the danger of a run upon the bank.
The argument against it is, that each branch must be under a
distinct, though subordinate direction, to which a considerable lati-
tude of discretion must of necessity be entrusted. And as the property
of the whole institution would be liable for the engagements of each
part, that and its credit would be at stake, upon the prudence of
the directors of every part. The mismanagement of either branch
might hazard serious disorder in the whole.
CURRENCY, BANKING, AND STATE DEBTS 489
Another wish, dictated by the particular situation of the country
is, that the bank could be so constituted as to be made an immediate
instrument of loans to the proprietors of land; but this wish also
yields to the difficulty of accomplishing it. Land is alone an unfit
fund for a bank circulation. If the notes issued upon it were not to
be payable in coin, on demand, or at a short date, this would amount
to nothing more than a repetition of the paper emissions, which are
now exploded by the general voice. If the notes are to be payable
in coin, the land must first be converted into it by sale, or mortgage.
The difficulty of effecting the latter, is the* very thing which begets
the desire of finding another resource, and the former would not be
practicable on a sudden emergency, but with sacrifices which would
make the cure worse than the disease. Neither is the idea of consti-
tuting the fund partly of coin and partly of land, free from impedi-
ments. These two species of property do not, for the most part,
unite in the same hands. Will the moneyed man consent to enter
into a partnership with the landholder, by which the latter will share
in the profits which will be made by the money of the former? The
, money, it is evident, will be the agent or efficient cause of the profits —
the land can only be regarded as an additional security. It is not
difficult to forsee that an union, on such terms, will not be readily
formed. If the landholders are to procure the money by sale or mort-
gage of a part of their lands, this they can as well do when the stock
consists wholly of money, as if it were to be compounded of money
and land.
To procure for the landholders the assistance of loans, is the
great desideratum. Supposing other difficulties surmounted, and a
fund created, composed partly of coin and partly of land, yet the
benefit contemplated could only then be obtained, by the bank's
advancing them its notes for the whole, or part, of the value of the
lands they had subscribed to the stock. If this advance was small,
the relief aimed at would not be given; if it was large, the quantity
of notes issued would be a cause of distrust; and, if received at all,
they would be likely to return speedily upon the bank for payment;
which, after exhausting its coin, might be under a necessity of turning
its lands into money, at any price that could be obtained for them,
to the irreparable prejudice of the proprietors.
490 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
B. Public and Private Finances after the Dissolution of the Banky
1812-1815 1
In 181 1 President Madison vetoed a bill to recharter the First United States
Bank. Consequently the bank was forced to wind up its affairs; and in its place
many state banks sprang up. During the war that followed, practically all these
banks found it imp)Ossible to redeem their notes, which formed the larger part of the
circulating medium. These notes depreciated in value, and many of them became
entirely worthless. The government was hard pressed for funds and used the
banks as best it could to finance the war. The situation has been well described
as follows:
The deficiency in the amount of bank capital and bank accommo-
dations, apprehended from the winding up of the National Bank,
was more than supplied by the new state banks which sprung up in
consequence of its destruction. In three years, 1810, 181 1, 181 2,
forty-one new state banks were chartered, with an aggregate capital of
some thirty-six millions; so that about the commencement of the war
with Great Britain, the total number of banks in the United States
was upwards of one hundred and twenty, and the aggregate bank
capital, a part of which, however, was only nominal, about seventy-
six millions.
The government, out of tenderness for the people, or a tender
regard for their own popularity, perhaps a mixture of both, had
resolved to carry on the war without the imposition of taxes. They
relied upon loans. But the loan-market of Europe was shut against
them ; and at home a large proportion of the monied men were opposed
to the war, and not well inclined to furnish the means for carrying it
on. The government were obliged to tempt borrowers by the offer
of very advantageous terms; and as the war went on, and their
necessities increased, the terms they offered became still more favor-
able. Even the most tempting offers proved no match for the political
prejudices of Eastern capitalists, — a most striking proof that avarice
is a passion less strong than hate. But in the Middle and Southern
States, where the war was popular, those who had money or could
command it, were pushed by the double impulse of patriotism and
interest to subscribe to the government loans. In some cases, the
banks themselves became the lenders; in most others, they lent to
the individuals, who lent to the government. Things went on in this
way till after the middle of the year 1814. The government was
then in the greatest distress for money, and more clamorous than
^ Banks, Banking, and Paper Currencies. By Richard Hildreth (Boston,
1840), 64-8.
CURRENCY, BANKING, AND STATE DEBTS 491
ever for loans. But the banks had aheady gone to the utmost limit
of their means; their capitals were all invested; they had put more
notes into circulation than they could keep there; and provided they
continued to redeem those notes, — that is, to pay their own debts, —
it would be impossible for them to lend the government any more
money, or to enable individuals to lend it; indeed a speedy contrac-
tion of existing loans was absolutely necessary.
Examples of successful fraud seldom lack imitators. In this
exigency, the bank directors bethought themselves of what the Bank
of England had done, and was still doing. They well knew how
profitable a speculation the stoppage of specie payment had proved
to that bank; — it was accordingly suggested among them, and the
resolution was presently adopted, to suspend specie payments.
To carry this scheme into successful operation, it was necessary
first to secure the tacit approbation of the government; for if the
government would consent to go on receiving their notes in payment
of all public dues, it would give them a credit, which would sustain
their circulation. The government was at the mercy of the banks.
Overwhelmed with financial distresses brought upon it by neglect to
provide sufficient pecuniary means for carrying on the war, it had no
power to refuse; for if the banks did not supply money, where was it
to be had?
Accordingly the government gave a tacit consent to the new ar-
rangement, and in the month of August, the Banks of Philadelphia,
Baltimore, and New York, by a compact among their directors, sus-
pended specie payments, simultaneously, — an example which, be-
fore the end of the year, was followed, with but one or two exceptions,
by all the banks of the Middle, Southern, and Western States.
This suspension of specie payments did not extend to New England.
The bank directors there did not choose to become parties to this
scheme for enriching themselves, and assisting the government, at
the expense of honesty and their creditors; nor would the people,
a majority of whom were opposed to the war, ever have submitted
to so outrageous an imposition. The Philadelphia banks were under-
stood to have taken the lead in this business of the suspension, and in
imitation of what had been done in London, when the Bank of Eng-
land suspended payment, a public meeting of merchants was held to
sanction the measure, and to sustain the credit of the banks. As the
alleged motive of the suspension was so very patriotic, as the banks
pledged themselves to resume upon the return of peace, and as the
demand for provisions and manufactures, created by the war, gave
492 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
a great activity to business, the suspension was submitted to by the
people without a murmur.
Owing to the extensive and very advantageous loans which the
banks had made to the government, the business of banking had
become very profitable, and the dividends were high. As always
happens, there was a rush to participate in these high profits; and it
thus came about, that just about the time of the suspension of specie
payments, a great number of new banks came into existence, which
thus commenced their operations, unrestrained by that necessary
check of payment on demand, by which alone the issues of a bank
can be safely regulated. It was about this time that the State of
Pennsylvania had chartered thirty-seven new banks, by a single act,
many of which took advantage of the suspension of specie payments
to go into operation without any solid capital whatever. The same
causes gave rise to the establishment of new banks in other states.
Almost all these institutions, put into operation during the suspen-
sion of specie payments, were mere speculative concerns, not pos-
sessed of any substantial means whatever.
The suspension, it was said, was to continue only during the war.
Peace came in five months; but the banks gave not the slightest
indication of any desire to return to honest courses. The people,
not well acquainted with the subject, purposely puzzled and misled
by the specious arguments of the bank directors, and those who were
interested, or who supposed themselves interested, in the continuance
of the suspension, and deceived by the apparent prosperity of business,
under this new system of banking, did not move in the matter. As
to the government, it was still involved in the deepest financial em-
barrassment. The treasury overflowed with "unconvertible" bank
paper; but the greatest diflficulty was experienced in meeting the
heavy demands which fell due in the Eastern States, where nothing
would be accepted in payment except specie or notes equivalent
to specie.
The banks therefore went on to suit themselves; and the years
1815, 1816, may be well marked in the American calendar, as the
jubilee of swindlers and the Saturnalia of non-specie-paying banks.
Throughout the whole country, New England excepted, it required
no capital to set up a bank. All that was wanted was a charter; and
influential politicians easily obtained charters from the blind ]):irty
confidence or interested votes of the state legislatures.
The banks, all through the country, immediately commenced
lending their paper to all who could give any tolerable security.
CURRENCY, BANKING, AND STATE DEBTS 493
This over issue of notes soon produced a depreciation. Depreciation
produced a rise in prices; the apparent value of all kinds of property
suddenly went up, and the people imagined they were never growing
rich so fast. Business and all kinds of speculation were uncommonly
brisk; the dividends made by the banks were enormous.
This description does not apply to New England. None of this
artificial stimulus was felt there. In fact, that part of the country
was subjected to a particular depression; for the foreign trade left
Boston and the other New England ports, where the duties were
demanded in specie or notes equivalent to specie, and concentrated
at Philadelphia, Baltimore and other southern cities, where the cur-
rency in which duties were paid had depreciated twenty-five per cent
and upwards. Thus, by one of the effects of this public fraud, the
New Englanders were punished for being honest; and those places
in which swindling was carried to the greatest extent, and the greatest
depreciation in the currency produced, obtained, as the reward of their
villainy, a monopoly of the foreign trade.
II. Second United States Bank
A. Necessity of a United States Bank after the War of 1812 *
In 1816 Congress chartered the Second United States Bank for a period of
twenty years. Fourteen years later a committee of the House of Representatives
described the condition of the currency at the end of the War of 181 2, and explained
how the bank had assisted the government in restoring it to a sound basis. This
committee reported in part :
The committee will now present a brief exposition of the state of
currency at the close of the war; of the injury which resulted from it,
as well to the Government as to the community; and their reasons for
beHeving that it could not have been restored to a sound condition,
and cannot now be preserved in that condition, without the agency
of such an institution as the Bank of the United States.
The price current appended to this report will exhibit a scale of
depreciation in the local currency, ranging, through various degrees,
to twenty, and even to twenty-five per cent. Among the principal
Eastern cities, Washington and Baltimore were the points at which
the depreciation was greatest. The paper of the banks in these places
was from twenty to twenty-two per cent, below par. At Philadelphia
^ Legislative aiid Documentary History of the Bank of the United States, etc.
(Washington, 1832), 742-3.
494 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
the depreciation was considerably less, though, even there, it w
from seventeen to eighteen per cent. In New York and Charlest(
it was from seven to ten per cent. But, in the interior of the count r
where banks were established, the depreciation was even greater than
at Washington and Baltimore. In the western part of Pennsylvania.,
and particularly at Pittsburg, it was twenty-five per cent. These
statements, however, of the relative depreciation of bank paper at
various places, as compared with specie, give a very inadequate idea
of the enormous evil inflicted upon the community by the excessive
issues of bank paper. No proposition is better established than that
the value of money, whether it consists of specie or paper, is depre-
ciated in exact proportion to the increase of its quantity, in any
given state of the demand for it. If, for example, the banks, in 1816,
doubled the quantity of the circulating medium by their excessive
issues, they produced a general degradation of the entire mass of the
currency, including gold and silver, proportioned to the redundancy
of the issues, and wholly independent of the relative depreciation of
bank paper at different places, as compared with specie. The
nominal money price of every article was, of course, one hundred
per cent, higher than it would have been, but for the duplication of
the quantity of the circulating medium. Money is nothing more nor
less than the measure by which the relative value of all articles of
merchandise is ascertained. If, when the circulating medium is fifty
millions, an article should cost one dollar, it would certainly cost
two, if, without any increase of the uses of a circulating medium, its
quantity should be increased to one hundred millions. This rise in
the price of commodities, or depreciation in the value of money, as
compared with them, would not be owing to the want of credit in the
bank bills, of which the currency happened to be composed. It would
exist, though these bills were of undoubted credit, and convertible
into specie at the pleasure of the holder, and would result simply
from the redundancy of their quantity. It is important to a just
understanding of the subject, that the relative depreciation of bank
paper at different places, as compared with specie, should not be con-
founded with this general depreciation of the entire mass of the cir-
culating medium, including specie. Though closely allied, both in
their causes and effects, they deseiA^e to be separately considered.
The evils resulting from the relative depreciation of bank paper
at different places, are more easily traced to their causes, more pal-
pable in their nature, and, consequently, more generally understood
by the community. Though much less ruinous than the cxils re-
CURRENCY, BANKING, AND STATE DEBTS 495
suiting from the general depreciation of the whole currency, they are
yet of sufficient magnitude to demand a full exposition.
A very serious evil, already hinted at, which grew out of the rela-
tive depreciation of bank paper, at the different points of importation,
was its inevitable tendency to draw all the importations of foreign
merchandise to the cities where the depreciation was greatest, and
divert them from those where the currency was comparatively sound.
If the Bank of the United States had not been established, and the
Government had been left without any alternative but to receive the
depreciated local currency, it is difficult to imagine the extent to which
the evasion of the revenue laws would have been carried. Every
State would have had an interest to encourage the excessive issues of
its banks, and increase the degradation of its currency, with a view
to attract foreign commerce. Even in the condition which the cur-
rency had reached in 181 6, Boston, and New York, and Charleston,
would have found it advantageous to derive the supplies of foreign
merchandise through Baltimore; and commerce would, undoubtedly,
have taken that direction, had not the currency been corrected. To
avoid this injurious diversion of foreign import, Massachusetts, and
New York, and South Carolina, would have been driven, by all
motives of self defence and self interest, to degrade their respective
currencies at least to a par with the currency of Baltimore; and thus
a rivalry in the career of depreciation would have sprung up, to which
no limit can be assigned. As the tendency of this state of things
would have been to cause the largest portion of the revenue to be
collected at a few places, and in the most depreciated of the local
currency, it would have followed that a very small part of that
revenue would have been disbursed at the points where it was collected.
The Government would, consequently, have been compelled to sus-
tain a heavy loss upon the transfer of its funds to the points of expendi-
ture. The annual loss which would have resulted from these causes
alone, cannot be estimated at a less sum than two millions of dollars.
But the principal loss which resulted from the relative deprecia-
tions of bank paper at different places, and its want of general credit,
was that sustained by the community in the great operations of com-
mercial exchange. The extent of these operations annually, may be
safely estimated at sixty millions of dollars. Upon this sum, the loss
sustained by the merchants, and planters, and farmers, and manu-
facturers, was not probably less than an average of ten per cent.,
being the excess of the rate of exchange between its natural rate in
a sound state of the currency, and beyond the rate to which it has
496 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
been actually reduced by the operations of the Bank of the Unit'
States. It will be thus perceived, that an annual tax of six milliuh:,
of dollars was levied from the industrious and productive classes, by
the large moneyed capitalists in our commercial cities, who were
engaged in the business of brokerage. A variously depreciated cur-
rency, and a fluctuating state of the exchanges, open a wide and
abundant harvest to the money brokers; and it is not, therefore,
surprising, that they should be opposed to an institution, which, at
the same time that it has relieved the community from the enormous
tax just stated, has deprived them of the enormous profits which they
derived from speculating in the business of exchange. In addition to
the losses sustained by the community, in the great operations of
exchange, extensive losses were suffered throughout the interior of
the country in all the smaller operations of trade, as well as by the
failure of the numerous paper banks, puffed into a factitious credit
by fraudulent artifices, and having no substantial basis of capital
to ensure the redemption of their bills.
B. President Jackson's Veto of the Bank Bill in i8j2 ^
Despite the assistance the Second United States Bank had rendered in restoring
the currency and in placing the banking of the country on a sound basis, there were
those who believed that its existence was contrary to the Constitution and that it
was a menace to the government. Notable among the pubHc men who opposed
the bank was President Jackson.
In 1829 he had expressed doubt as to the necessity or the desirability of the
bank. Later, the bank was charged with meddling in poHtics. Friends of the
bank succeeded in 1832 in having Congress pass a bill rechartering it for a term of
twenty years. President Jackson vetoed the bill on several grounds, one of which
was that the bank was a monopoly and hence inexpedient.
The bill "to modify and continue" the act entitled "An act to
incorporate the subscribers to the Bank of the United States" was
presented to me on the 4th July instant. Having considered it with
that solemn regard to the principles of the Constitution which the
day was calculated to inspire, and come to the conclusion that it
ought not to become a law, I herewith return it to the Senate, in which
it originated, with my objections.
A bank of the United States is in many respects convenient for the
Government and useful to the people. Entertaining this opinion, and
deeply impressed with the belief that some of the powers and privi-
* Messages and Papers of the Presidents. Edited by James D. Richardson
([Waihington], 1895-1903), II, 576-8.
CURRENCY, BANKING, AND STATE DEBTS 497
leges possessed by the existing bank are unauthorized by the Con-
stitution, subversive of the rights of the States, and dangerous to
the liberties of the people, I felt it my duty at an early period of my
Administration to call the attention of Congress to the practicability
of organizing an institution combining all its advantages and obvi-
ating these objections. I sincerely regret that in the act before me
I can perceive none of those modifications of the bank charter which
are necessary, in my opinion, to make it compatible with justice,
with sound policy, or with the Constitution of our country.
The present corporate body, denominated the president, directors,
and company of the Bank of the United States, will have existed at
the time this act is intended to take effect twenty years. It enjoys
an exclusive privilege of banking under the authority of the General
Government, a monopoly of its favor and support, and, as a neces-
sary consequence, almost a monopoly of the foreign and domestic
exchange. The powers, privileges, and favors bestowed upon it in
the original charter, by increasing the value of the stock far above its
par value, operated as a gratuity of many millions to the stockholders.
An apology may be found for the failure to guard against this
result in the consideration that the effect of the original act of incor-
poration could not be certainly foreseen at the time of its passage.
The act before me proposes another gratuity to the holders of the
same stock, and in many cases to the same men, of at least seven
millions more. This donation finds no apology in any uncertainty
as to the effect of the act. On all hands it is conceded that its passage
will increase at least 20 or 30 per cent more the market price of
the stock, subject to the payment of the annuity of $200,000 per year
secured by the act, thus adding in a moment one-fourth to its par
value. It is not our own citizens only who are to receive the bounty
of our Government. More than eight millions of the stock of this
bank are held by foreigners. By this act the American Republic
proposes virtually to make them a present of some millions of
dollars. For these gratuities to foreigners and to some of our own
opulent citizens the act secures no equivalent whatever. They are
the certain gains of the present stockholders under the operation of
this act, after making full allowance for the payment of the bonus.
Every monopoly and all exclusive privileges are granted at the
expense of the public, which ought to receive a fair equivalent. The
many millions which this act proposes to bestow on the stockholders
of the existing bank must come directly or indirectl}'- out of the earn-
ings of the American people. It is due to them, therefore, if their
498 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
Government sell monopolies and exclusive privileges, that they should
at least exact for them as much as they are worth in open market.
The value of the monopoly in this case may be correctly ascertained.
The twenty-eight millions of stock would probably be at an advance
of 50 per cent, and command in market at least $42,000,000, subject
to the payment of the present bonus. The present value of the mo-
nopoly, therefore, is $17,000,000, and this the act proposes to sell for
three millions, payable in fifteen annual installments of $200,000 each.
It is not conceivable how the present stockholders can have any
claim to the special favor of the Government. The present corpora-
tion has enjoyed its monopoly during the period stipulated in the
original contract. If we must have such a corporation, why should
not the Government sell out the whole stock and thus secure to the
people the full market value of the privileges granted? Why should
not Congress create and sell twenty-eight millions of stock, incorpo-
rating the purchasers with all the powers and privileges secured in this
act and putting the premium upon the sales into the Treasury?
But this act does not permit competition in the purchase of this
monopoly. It seems to be predicated on the erroneous idea that the
present stockholders have a prescriptive right not only to the favor
but to the bounty of Government. It appears that more than a fourth
part of the stock is held by foreigners and the residue is held by a few
hundred of our own citizens, chiefly of the richest class. For their
benefit does this act exclude the whole American people from compe-
tition in the purchase of this monopoly and dispose of it for many
millions less than it is worth. This seems the less excusable because
some of our citizens not now stockholders petitioned that the door of
competition might be opened, and offered to take a charter on terms
much more favorable to the Government and country.
But this proposition, although made by men whose aggregate
wealth is believed to be equal to all the private stock in the existing
bank, has been set aside, and the bounty of our Government is pro-
posed to be again bestowed on the few who have been fortunate enough
to secure the stock and at this moment wield the power of the existing
institution. I can not perceive the justice or policy of this course.
If our Government must sell monopolies, it would seem to be its duty
to take nothing less than their full value, and if gratuities must be
made once in fifteen or twenty years let them not be bestowed on the
subjects of a foreign government nor upon a designated and favored
class of men in our own country. It is but justice and good policy,
as far as th«' ri itun- ,>f the case will admit, to ('oiiUnc our favors to our
CURRENCY, BANKING, AND STATE DEBTS 499
own fellow citizens, and let each in his turn enjoy an opportunity to
profit by our bounty. In the bearings of the act before me upon
these points I find ample reasons why it should not become a law.
III. The Panic of 1837 and its Effects
A. President Van Buren on the Panic of 18 jy ^
Following his veto of the Bank Bill, President Jackson had the government
deposits withdrawn from the United States Bank, and placed in certain selected
state banks, often referred to as "pet banks." These banks naturally inflated their
note issues and put out more currency than the country really needed. In 1836
the President ordered the receivers of public monies to receive no more notes of the
banks, except in a few unimportant instances, in payment for public lands.
The result was a run on the banks by note holders. Many of the banks were not
able to redeem their notes and consequently they suspended specie payments.
The panic of 1837 followed, and President Van Buren discussed it as follows:
During the earlier stages of the revulsion [the panic of 1837]
through which we have just passed much acrimonious discussion
arose and great diversity of opinion existed as to its real causes. This
was not surprising. The operations of credit are so diversified and
the influences which affect them so numerous, and often so subtle,
that even impartial and well-informed persons are seldom found to
agree in respect to them. To inherent difficulties were also added
other tendencies which were by no means favorable to the discovery
of truth. It was hardly to be expected that those who disapproved
the policy of the Government in relation to the currency would, in
the excited state of public feeling produced by the occasion, fail to
attribute to that policy any extensive embarrassment in the monetary
affairs of the country. The matter thus became connected with the
passions and conflicts of party; opinions were more or less affected
by political considerations, and differences were prolonged which might
otherwise have been determined by an appeal to facts, by the exer-
cise of reason, or by mutual concession. It is, however, a cheering
reflection that circumstances of this nature can not prevent a com-
munity so intelligent as ours from ultimately arriving at correct
conclusions. Encouraged by the firm belief of this truth, I proceed
to state my views, so far as may be necessary to a clear understanding
of the remedies I feel it my duty to propose and of the reasons by
which I have been led to recommend them.
The history of trade in the United States for the last three or
^ Messages and Papers of the Presidents. Edited by James D. Richardson
([Washington], 1895-1903), III, 325-7.
500 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
four years affords the most convincing evidence that our present
condition is chiefly to be attributed to overaction in all the depart-
ments of lousiness — an overaction deriving, perhaps, its first impulses
from antecedent causes, but stimulated to its destructive consequences
by excessive issues of bank paper and by other faciUties for the ac-
quisition and enlargement of credit. At the commencement of the
year 1834 the banking capital of the United States, including that
of the national bank, then existing, amounted to about $200,000,000,
the bank notes then in circulation to about ninety-five millions, and
the loans and discounts of the banks to three hundred and twenty-
four millions. Between that time and the ist of January, 1836,
being the latest period to which accurate accounts have been received,
our banking capital was increased to more than two hundred and
fifty-one millions, our paper circulation to more than one hundred
and forty millions, and the loans and discounts to more than four
hundred and fifty-seven millions. To this vast increase are to be
added the many millions of credit acquired by means of foreign loans,
contracted by the States and State institutions, and, above all, by the
lavish accommodations extended by foreign dealers to our mer-
chants. The consequences of this redundancy of credit and of the
spirit of reckless speculation engendered by it were a foreign debt
contracted by our citizens estimated in March last at more than
$30,000,000; the extension to traders in the interior of our country
of credits for supplies greatly beyond the wants of the people; the
investment of $39,500,000 in unproductive public lands in the years
1835 and 1836, whilst in the preceding year the sales amounted to
only four and a half millions; the creation of debts, to an almost
countless amount, for real estate in existing or anticipated cities and
villages, equally unproductive, and at prices now seen to have been
greatly disproportionate to their real value; the ex-penditure of im-
mense sums in improvements which in many cases have been found
to be ruinously improvident; the diversion to other pursuits of much
of the labor that should have been applied to agriculture, thereby
contributing to the expenditure of large sums in the importation of
gi-ain from Europe — an expenditure which, amounting in 1834 to
about $250,000, was in the first two quarters of the present year
increased to more than $2,000,000; and finally, without enumerating
other injurious results, the rapid growth among all classes, and espe-
cially in our great commercial towns, of luxurious habits founded
too often on merely fancied wealth, and detrimental alike to the
industry, the resources, and the morals of our people.
CURRENCY, BANKING, AND STATE DEBTS 501
It was so impossible that such a state of things could long continue
that the prospect of revulsion was present to the minds of considerate
men before it actually came. None, however, had correctly anti-
cipated its severity. A concurrence of circumstances inadequate of
themselves to produce such widespread and calamitous embarrass-
ments tended so greatly to aggravate them that they can not be
overlooked in considering their history. Among these may be men-
tioned, as most prominent, the great loss of capital sustained by our
commercial emporium in the fire of December, 1835 — a loss the
effects of which were underrated at the time because postponed for
a season by the great facilities of credit then existing; the disturbing
effects in our commercial cities of the transfers of the public moneys
required by the deposit law of June, 1836, and the measures adopted
by the foreign creditors of our merchants to reduce their debts and to
withdraw from the United States a large portion of our specie.
B. Effects of the Panic on Banking ^ i8jy-i8jg ^
The panic of 1837 not only caused the banks to suspend specie payment, but
compelled many of them to close their doors. Two years later the panic recurred
in a mild form and other banks were forced out of business. Mr. Hildreth, the
historian, describes the situation as follows:
The New York banks having determined to continue to be banks,
and not to convert themselves into mere machines for manufacturing
paper money of no particular value, the banks of New England, of
New Jersey, and of the whole North-west, have found themselves
obliged, with more or less reluctance, and some of them after ineffec-
tual attempts at suspension, to continue to be banks; while the banks
of Pennsylvania, and of the South generally, have taken the other
course, and, to borrow a phrase from Mr. Calhoun, have unbanked
themselves. How long they will choose to continue in this anomalous
condition it is not easy to say. Some of them will be apt to have great
difficulty in getting out of it.
All the southern banks, unless perhaps we ought to except a few
in New Orleans and some other of the large commercial towns, labor
under one great difficulty for which it is not easy to find a remedy.
They are managed mostly by planters, and they lend principally to
planters, a class of men quite destitute of those ideas of mercantile
punctuality essential to the safe conduct of a specie-paying bank.
^ Banks, Banking and Paper Currencies. By Richard Hildreth (Boston, 1840),
106-8.
502 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
Moreover, the customers of these banks are much too fond of borrow-
ing money, not merely in anticipation of the crop, but for permanent
investment in agricultural operations, — loans which no bank can
safely make.
Indeed several of these institutions bear altogether too close a
resemblance to Mr. Law's famous land banks. The capital of several
of them has been raised in Europe in this way. The subscribers to
the stock, instead of paying in their subscriptions in cash, have given
the bank a mortgage of land and slaves, appraised as of equivalent
value. These mortgages the bank has assigned to the State, as
security for the ultimate repayment of a state loan, which the State
has been induced to contract abroad for the benefit of the stockholders
in the bank, who have entered into a contract to keep down the
interest of the loan, and for its ultimate repayment. In this way a
cash banking capital has been obtained; but as the stockholders, in
all these banks, have a right to a perpetual loan nearly to the amount
of their stock, it is evident that the amount of capital left to be em-
ployed in the discount of mercantile papers must be very limited, and
even this small amount is pretty certain to be engrossed by the dis-
count of accommodation paper for the stockholders. The truth is,
that banks are mercantile institutions, adapted to the wants and
habits of a mercantile community, and little likely to be well managed,
or to answer any good purpose, in communities destitute, to a great
extent, of commercial spirit and feelings.
The number of banks in the United States at the close of the year
1839, including the non-specie-paying banks, exceeded seiTu hundred
with a capital of upwards of three hmidred millions of dollars, being
double the number of banks, and double the amount of banking capi-
tal, which existed ten years before.
The principal occasion of this great increase of local banks was,
the refusal to recharter the Bank of the United States. This was
especially the case in the West and South, where the currency had
been principally supplied and the banking business transacted by
the branches of the National Bank. The closing of those branches
gave a great impulse to the creation of new banks throughout all that
portion of the country.
The total number of bank failures which occurred in the United
States in the half century which elapsed from the period of the first
institution of banks in the country, down to the beginning of the
year 1837, the era of the second general su.spension, was about one
humlred and seventy- five, — ahowi one hundred and twelve of wliich oc-
CURRENCY, BANKING, AND STATE DEBTS 503
curred in the States south and west of Pennsylvania. By far the
larger part of these failures happened to banks which had been put in
operation during the suspension of specie payments from 18 14 to
1818, and which were set up without any substantial capital.
The number of bank failures consequent upon the crisis of 1837
is not yet known. It amounts perhaps to thirty. The bank failures
that will occur in consequence of the crisis of 1839, an appendix, as
it were, to that of 1837, will be still more numerous.
All these failures have originated in one of the four- following
causes, which have produced all the bank failures that ever happened.
I St. An attempt to do banking business without a sufficient capital.
2d. Ignorance and incapacity on the part of the directors.
3d. Fraud on the part of the directors.
4th. A general depreciation of property, ruinous to the debtors
of the banks, by which the bank capital has been swallowed up.
C. Arguments for an Independent Treasury and ''Hard Money" 1845 ^
The disastrous financial experience of the government with the state banks
during the panic of 1837 revived the idea of establishing an independent treasury
which it was thought would be able to take the place of the banks in handhng
government funds. Accordingly, an independent treasury was estabUshed in
1840. The next year the Whigs, who had come into power with Harrison's election
to the presidency, abolished it and attempted to re-establish a United States Bank.
In the latter attempt, however, they were unsuccessful, because of President
Tyler's opposition to it. When the Democrats came into power in 1845, they set
about to re-enact the law of 1840, which they did in 1846. Secretary Walker's
argument for an independent treasury was as follows :
The Secretary of the Treasury, on coming into office, found the
revenues deposited with banks. The law estabUshing the Inde-
pendent Treasury was repealed, and the secretary had no power to
reestabUsh that system. Congress had not only repealed that law,
but, as a substitute, had adopted the present system of deposite banks,
and prohibited changing any one of those for another bank, except
for specified reasons. No alternative was left but to continue the
existing system until Congress should think proper to change it. That
change, it is hoped, will now be made by a return to the treasury of
the Constitution. One of the great evils of banks is the constant
expansion and contraction of the currency; and this evil is augmented
by the deposites of the revenue with banks, whether State or national.
The only proper course for the government is to keep its own money
^ Treasury Report, 1845 (Washington, 1846), 16.
504 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
separate from all banks and bankers, in its own treasury — whetht r
in the mint, branch mints, or other government agencies — and to
use only gold and silver coin in all receipts and disbursements. The
business of tht country will be more safe when an adequate supply
of specie is kept within our limits, and its circulation encouraged by
all the means within the power of the government. If this govern-
ment, and the States, and the people unite in suppressing the use of
specie, an adequate supply, for want of a demand, cannot be kept
within our limits, and the condition of the business and currency
of the country will be perilous and uncertain. It will be completely
within the power of the banks, whose paper will constitute the ex-
clusive circulation of the whole community. Nor will it be useful
to establish a constitutional treasury, if it is to receive or disburse
the paper of banks. Separation from banks in that case would only
be nominal, and no addition would be made to the circulation of
gold and silver.
Various forms of paper credit have been suggested, as connected
with the operations of the constitutional treasury; but they are all
considered as impairing one of the great objects of such a treasury —
namely, an augmented circulation of specie. If paper, in whatever
form, or from whatever source it may issue, should be introduced as a
circulation by the constitutional treasury, it would, precisely to that
extent, diminish its use as a means of circulating gold and silver.
The constitutional treasury could be rendered a most powerful
auxiliary of the mint in augmenting the specie circulation. The
amount of public money which can be placed in the mint is now lim-
ited by law to one million of dollars; and to that extent it is now
used as a depository, and as a means of increasing our coinage.
It is suggested that this limitation may be so modified as to
permit the use of our mint and branch mints for a much larger
sum, in connection with the constitutional treasury. The amount
of public money received at New York greatly exceeds that
collected at all other points, and would of itself seem to call
for a place of public deposite there; in view of which, the loca-
tion of a branch of the mint of the United States at that
city would be most convenient and useful. The argument used
against a constitutional treasury, of the alleged insecurity of the
public funds in the hands of individuals, and especially the vast
amount collected at New York, will be entirely obviated by such
an establishment. The mint of the United States has now been in
existence 52 years. It has had the custody of upwards of 1 14,000,000
CURRENCY, BANKING, AND STATE DEBTS 505
dollars, and during this long period of time there never has
been a loss of any of its specie in the mint by the government. The
mint at Philadelphia is now conducted with great efficiency, by the
able and faithful officer at the head of that establishment, whose
general supervisory authority, without leaving the parent mint, might
still be wisely extended to the branch at New York. Besides the
utility of such a branch as a place for keeping safely and disbursing
the public money, it is believed that the coinage might be greatly
augmented by the existence of a branch of the mint at that great city.
It is there that two thirds of the revenue is annually collected — the
whole of which, under the operation of the constitutional treasury,
would be received in specie. Of that amount, a very large sum
would be received in coin of other countries, and especially in foreign
gold coins — all which could be speedily converted, upon the spot,
into our own coins of gold and silver. The amount also of such for-
eign coin brought by emigrants to the city of New York is very con-
siderable; a large portion of which would find its way to the branch
of the mint for re-coinage. The foreign gold coins do not, and it
is feared will not, circulate generally as a currency, notwithstanding
they are made a tender by law. The rate at which these coins are
fixed by law is not familiar to the people; the denomination of such
coin is inconvenient; the parts into which it is divided are not decimal;
the rates at which it is taken vary in different parts of the Union. It
is inconvenient in the way of ready transfer in counting; it is more
difficult, in common use, to distinguish the genuine from the counter-
feit foreign coin; and the stamp upon it is not familiar to the people —
from all which causes, a foreign gold coin does not, and will not, cir-
culate generally as a currency among the people. In many of the
banks, nearly the whole of their specie is kept in every variety of
foreign gold coin; and when it is tendered by them in payment of
their notes, the great body of the people, not being familiar with these
coins, do not receive them; and thus the circulation of a gold cur-
rency is, to a great extent, defeated. If these coins were converted
at our mint, or branch mints, into the eagle, the half-eagle, the quarter-
eagle, we should speedily have a large supply of American gold coin,
and it would very soon be brought into common use as a currency,
and thus give to it greater stability, and greater security to all the
business of the country. A considerable amount of foreign gold coin
has, during the present year, under the directions of this department,
been converted into American gold coin; but the process would be
much more rapid if aided by the organization of the constitutional
5o6 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
treasury, and the establishment of a branch of the mint at the grc
commercial emporium of the Union. With the mint and brani
mints as depositories, the sum remaining in the hands of other receil
ers of public money, whether of lands or customs, would be incon-
siderable, and the government could be readily protected from all
losses of such sums by adequate bonds, and the power by law to con-
vict and punish as criminals all who embezzle the public moneys.
It is believed, under such a system, that no defaults would take
place, and that the public moneys would be safely kept and dis-
bursed in gold and silver. This government is made, by the consti-
tution, the guardian of a specie currency. That currency can only
be coined, and its value regulated, by this government. It is one of
its first duties to supply such a currency, by an efficient mint, and by
general regulations of the coinage; but in vain will it attempt to per-
form that duty, if, when coin is made or regulated in value, this
government dispenses with its use, and expels it from circulation,
or drives it out of the country, by substituting the paper of banks
in all the transactions of the government.
There is nothing which will advance so surely the prosperity of
the country as an adequate supply of specie, diffused throughout
every portion of the Union, and constituting, to a great extent, the
ordinary circulation everywhere among the people. It is a currency
that will never break nor fail; it will neither expand nor contract
beyond the legitimate business of the country; it will lead to no
extravagant speculations at one time, to be followed by certain de-
pression at another; nor will labor ever be robbed of its reward by
the depreciation of such currency. There is no danger that we shall
have too much gold and silver in actual circulation, or too small an
amount of bank paper, or that any injury ever will be inflicted upon
the business of the country, by a diminution of the circulation of the
paper of banks, and the substitution in its place, to that extent, of
gold and silver. Even their most ardent advocates must admit that
banks are subject to periodical expansions and contractions, and that
this evil would be increased by giving them the funds of the govern-
ment to loan, and by receiving and disbursing nothing but their paper.
It is believed that the permanent interest of every class of the
people will be advanced by the establishment of the constitutional
treasury, and that the manufacturers especially will derive great
benefit from its adoption. It will give stability to all their operations,
and insure them, to a great extent, against those fluctuations, e.xpan-
sions, and contractions of the currency so prejudicial to their interests.
CURRENCY, BANKING, AND STATE DEBTS 507
By guarding against inflations of the currency, it will have a tendency
to check periodical excesses of foreign importations purchased in fact
upon credit; while loans from banks, or dangerous enlargements of
their business, and excessive issues of their paper, will be greatly
diminished. . . .
IV. Systems of Banking in the United States before i86o
A. Early State Banking in the West, 1821-18JI ^
In some of the states, particularly in the west, banking was a state monopoly.
Many of these enterprises failed, and the one projected by Illinois is typical of its
class.
To remedy these evils [lack of money] the legislature of 182 1
created a State Bank. It was founded without money, and wholly
on the credit of the State. It was authorized to issue one, two, three,
five, ten, and twenty dollar notes, in the likeness of bank bills, bearing
two per cent, annual interest, and payable by the State in ten years.
A principal bank was established at Vandalia, and four or five branches
in other places; the legislature elected all the directors and officers;
a large number of whom were members of the legislature, and all of
them professional politicians. The bank was directed by law to lend
its bills to the people, to the amount of one hundred dollars, on
personal security; and upon the security of mortgages upon land for
a greater sum. These bills were to be receivable in payment of all
State and county taxes, and for all costs and fees, and salaries of pub-
lic officers; and if a creditor refused to endorse on his execution his
willingness to receive them in payment of debt, the debtor could
replevy or stay its collection for three years, by giving personal
security. So infatuated were this legislature with this absurd bank
project, that the members firmly believed that the notes of this bank
would remain at par with gold and silver; and they could readily
prove their belief to be well-founded; for the most difficult argument
to answer is one founded partly upon fact, but mostly upon guess
work and conjecture. . . .
In the summer of 182 1, the new bank went into operation. Every
man who could get an endorser borrowed his hundred dollars. The
directors, it is believed, were all politicians; and either were then,
or expected to be, candidates for office. Lending to everybody, and
refusing none, was the surest road to popularity. Accordingly, three
^ History of Illinois. By Thomas Ford (Chicago, 1854), 45-7.
5o8 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
hundred thousand dollars of the new money was soon lent without
much attention to security or care for eventual payment. It first
fell twenty-five cents, then fifty, and then seventy cents below par.
And as the bills of the Ohio and Kentucky banks had driven all other
money out of the State, so this new issue effectually kept it out. Such
a total absence was there of the silver coins, that it became utterly
impossible, in the course of trade, to make small change. The people,
from necessity, were compelled to cut the new bills into two pieces,
so as to make two halves of a dollar. This again further aided to
keep out even the smallest silver coins, for the people must know
that good money is a very proud thing, and will not circulate, stay,
or go where bad money is treated with as much respect as the good.
For about four years there was no other kind of money but this un-
current State bank paper. In the meantime, very few persons pre-
tended to pay their debts to the bank. More than half of those who*
had borrowed, considered what they had gotten from it as so much
clear gain, and never intended to pay it from the first.
B. Banking in New York and Massachusetts, 181J-1860 ^
During the period before the Civil War several systems of banking developed
in the United States. Three of these systems deserve notice. They are as
follows:
[The Suffolk Bank System]
Two measures combined to raise the value of bank-notes: one
was forcing the banks to redeem on presentation at their own counter,
and the other was the initiation of a system by which other banks
co-operated to secure such redemption. In the present day, when
government-notes and national-bank notes are current everywhere
at par, it is hard to realize how quickly a note depreciated at any
distance from the bank which issued it. This was especially the case
with notes from the banks of other States. There were no facilities
for the holder visiting the bank to demand payment, and there was a
doubt whether he would get the money if he did so visit it. In 1813
a movement toward a reform in the bank-currency began. Bills of
banks in other States were then at a discount in Boston from three
to five per cent, and the notes of Boston banks had nearly disappeared.
The New-England Bank, organized in that year with a capital of
$1,000,000, instituted the system of sending foreign bills for redemp-
* Industrial History of the United States. By Albert S. BoUcs (Norwich,
Conn., 1879), 797-^t 802.
CURRENCY, BANKING, AND STATE DEBTS 509
tion to the banks which issued them, and charging the bill-holders
only the actual expense of transmitting the notes and returning the
proceeds. This was the beginning of the system of redemption
afterward known as the Suffolk-Bank system. This system was more
fully developed at a later period (1825), when five of the Boston banks
— the Suffolk, Eagle, Manufacturers' and Mechanics' (now the
Tremont), the Globe, and State — undertook its management. For
a long time the system was bitterly opposed by those banks interested
in preventing a return of their circulation; but it was eventually
successful. Its exclusive management was finally assumed by the
Suffolk Bank; which bank compelled the redemption at par in Boston
of the notes of the New-England banks by a system of assorting and
returning the notes to the place of issue, and its operations were
continued down to the establishment of the national-bank system.
The amount of New-England bank-notes redeemed at the Suffolk
Bank from 1841 to 1857 was as follows, in millions of dollars: —
Date. Millions.
1841 109
1842 105
1844 126
1845 137
1846 141
1847 165
1848 178
1849 199
1850 220
1851 243
1852 245
1853 288
1854 231
1855 341
1856 397
1857 376
[Safety-fund System]
From 1 791, when the Bank of New York was incorporated, until
the declaration of war with Great Britain in 181 2, nineteen banks
were chartered, with an aggregate capital of $18,215,000. Ten of
them still exist, and are institutions of high rank. Between 181 2
and 1829 twenty-four more were chartered, with a capital of $25,105,-
000, of which $13,770,000 was for banks in New- York City.
As yet there has been no legislation looking to the security of bank
circulation, so little had the science of banking developed. But in
5IO READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
1829, when the charters of some forty banks were about to expire,
Gov. Van Buren recommended the passage of a law, which was enacted
in April of that year, providing a system of insurance of bank-notes
based upon a custom prevalent among Chinese merchants. The
law provided that all new or rechartered banks should pay an annual
tax of one-half of one per cent on their capital stock until three per .
cent had been paid in, and the fund should be used by the State
treasurer to redeem the notes and pay the debts of insolvent banks.
If the fund became impaired at any time, new contributions were to
be made to bring it up to a normal size. The law allowed the issue of
notes to twice the amount of the capital, and loans to two and a half
times the amount of capital. This safety-fund law did not accomplish
its purpose. In 1841-42 eleven banks failed, whose capital was
$3,150,000: their liabilities, which the State had to meet, amounted to
$2,558,933. These eleven banks had contributed but $86,274 to the
safety fund; and even down to Sept. 30, 1848, all of the safety-fund
banks had contributed but $1,876,063. The State issued six-per-cent
stock to make up the deficiency, and was partly reimbursed by new
contributions from the banks. The law was amended, however, in
1842, so that the safety-fund became a security for circulating-notes
only, and no other debts.
The law of 1829 also provided that there should be three com-
missioners to examine the banks, and report annually to the legis-
lature on the condition of those institutions. The law provided that
one commissioner should be appointed by the Governor and Senate,
one by the banks of the southern part of the State, and one by the
remaining banks. But in 1837 the Governor and Senate were author-
ized to select them all; and, this power being abused for political
ends, the work of examination was in 1843 taken from the commis-
sioners, whose office was abolished, and given to the comptroller.
In 1 85 1 the present ofl5ce of bank superintendent was created
instead. . . .
[Free Banking System]
The free banking system of New York was authorized in 1838.
Its two great features were, that it opened the privileges of banking,
on certain conditions, to all persons alike; and it provided much better
security for the redemption of notes than had yet been provided.
The system of deposits with the comptroller for security was the one
on which the national banks of a later date were based. It was
originally that all banking associations, on depositing stock of the
CURRENCY, BANKING, AND STATE DEBTS 511
State of New York or of the United States, or any State stock which
should be, or be made, equal to a five-per-cent stock, or bonds and
mortgages on improved and productive real estate, worth, exclusive
of the buildings thereon, double the amount secured by the mortgage,
and bearing interest at not less than six per cent per annum, should
receive from the comptroller of the State an equal amount of circu-
lating-notes. Previous to the year 1843 twenty-nine of these banks,
with an aggregate circulation of $1,233,374, had failed; and their
securities, consisting of stocks and bonds and mortgages amounting
to $1,555,338, were sold for $953,371, entailing a loss of $601,966.
The avails of the securities were sufficient to pay but seventy-four
per cent of the circulation alone. The losses to the bill-holders
occurred only in the case of those banks which had deposited State
stocks other than those of New York. The law was thereupon so
amended as to exclude all stocks, except those issued by the State of
New York, and to require those to be made equal to a five-per-cent
stock. An amendment in 1848 required that the stocks deposited
should bear six per cent interest instead of five; and that the bonds
and mortgages should bear interest at seven per cent, and should be
on productive property, and for an amount not exceeding two-fifths
of the value of the land covered by them. Subsequently, on April
10, 1849, the law was again so amended as to require that at least
one-half of the securities so deposited should consist of New- York-
State stocks, and that not more than one-half should be in the stocks
of the United States; the securities in all cases to be, or to be made,
equal to a stock producing an interest of six per cent per annum,
and to be taken at a rate not above their par value, and at not more
than their market-value.
Two other interesting features of the later State-bank legislation
in New York were the requirement that the banks redeem their notes
at some agency in New York, Albany, or Troy, and that stockholders
should be individually liable for the obligations of the bank to the
extent of their shares. The latter provision was incorporated into
the Constitution of 1846. The former was a law of 1840, which
allowed a discount of one-half of one per cent on redemption: in 1851
the discount was reduced to one-fourth of one per cent. The New-
York-City banks, however, soon inaugurated the Suffolk-Bank
system already described, and divided the discount between them-
' selves and the redemption agency. Such banks as did not provide
for redemption were forced to close up.
512
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
C. Conditions of Banking in i860 ^
During the decade 1 850-1 860 the banks of the country multiplied in nun
and enjoyed increased prosperity. Trade and commerce, both domestic
foreign, flourished, and the general prosperity of the time was reflected by the souiid
condition of banking. A partial report of conditions in i860 is as follows:
Among the evidences of prosperity and general accumulation of
wealth in the United States, the multiplication of banks with increa- '
aggregate capital is one of the most significant. When, as in t
country has been generally the case, individual promises representing
produce and merchandize, and made available through the inst^
mentality of banks, are almost the sole means by which commodii
pass from the producers to the consumers, the increased action of the
banks becomes the index of larger production and more active tra(i(\
Where crops and the products of manufacturing industry are m
abundant, the aggregate amount of paper created by their interchai
is larger, and the negotiations of this paper require greater bank
facilities. This want usually manifests itself in a more lucrat
banking business, which draws more capital into that employmc
Such a state of affairs presented itself during the decade which do-
with i860. The bank movement in the United States during thai
period underwent great expansion without becoming less sound.
In that respect it presented a strong contrast to the ex-pansion that
occurred in the decade which ended with 1840. In that period >
season of speculation in bank stocks and wild lands manifested its<
and the paper created for bank negotiation represented imaginar\
speculative values rather than commodities produced. Those vali
were never realized, and the whole paper system based on them cd
lapsed. If we compare the aggregate features of the banks at e;i '
decade with . . . the sum of the imports and exports for cor
spending dates, the restilts are as follows:
No.
Im{)ori
Years
of
Capital
Loans
Specie
Circulation
and
banks
exports
1830
330
$145,192,268
$200,451,214
$22,114,917
$ 61,323,898
$144,726,428
1840
901
358,442,692
462,896,523
33,105,155
106,968,572
239,227,46s
1843
691
228,861,948
254,544,937
33,505,806
58,563,608
149,090,275
1850
872
227,469,074
412,607,653
48,677,138
155,012,911
330,037,03!
i860
1,562
421,880,09s
691,945,580
83,594,537
207,102,477
762,288,S5e
* Preliminary Report on the Ei^lith Census, 1S60 (\Vashini?ton, 1862^, 75-8.
CURRENCY, BANKING, AND STATE DEBTS 513
The year 1843 was that of the lowest depression after the extensive
liquidation that following the expansions of i837-'39. ^^ that year
the bank credits were, however, large, as measured by the foreign
trade or the sum of the imports and exports, but an internal trade
had been developed through the settlements of the western country
which required more credits. The operation of the general bankrupt
law aided in clearing away the wreck of over two hundred banks
(that had failed, and which failures involved that of several sovereign
States that had loaned their credits for bank capital.
The elements of prosperity were now again active, and banking
facilities were required to a greater extent. The severe losses the
public had suffered made some more comprehensive guarantee neces-
sary to a full restoration of confidence in bank paper. In New York,
in 1838, a new principle had been adopted — that of requiring the
banks to deposit security for their circulating notes and holding
stockholders liable to an amount equal to the value of their shares.
On this basis the banking of New York was thenceforth to operate;
md the principle, as its value became recognized, was gradually
idopted in other States.
The failure of the ][ri§h^4iarvg5ts-t>f i846-'47, followed by those
Df England in i848-'4g-'try' creating a great demand for American
areadstuffs, stimulated business and gave a new impulse to banking.
The year 1850 showed an amount of foreign trade more than double
that of 1843. With the increase of business the banks were very
orosperous, as is manifest in the fact, that although the capital of the
aanks was no more in that year than in 1843, their discounts were
Dne hundred and fifty millions, or 60 per cent, greater. Thus the
decade opened with a very lucrative banking business, and amid
the greatest excitement in relation to the gold discoveries of Cali-
fornia. The spirit of enterprise abroad was very strong, and the
impression that prices were to rise by reason of the depreciation of
?old was prevalent; hence the general desire to operate, in order to
avail of the anticipated profits. Industry of all descriptions was very
active and productive, and there never was a period when the national
capital accumulated so fast, a remarkable evidence of which was
afforded in the vast amount expended in the construction of railroads;
while, of the large capital accumulated, a considerable portion was
employed in banking. The incorporated bank capital increased nearly
two hundred millions, and the private bank capital half as much.
The report of the Treasury Department gave the latter amount at
$118,036,080. . . .
514
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
The increase of bank capital was large in the Atlantic cities, par-
ticularly in Boston and New York, of which the number and capital
were respectively as follows:
1850
i860
Increase
No.
Capital
No.
Capital
No.
Capital
Boston
New York
30
31
$21,760,000
33,600,602
42
55
$36,581,700
69,758,777
12
24
$14,821,700
36,158,175
Total of two cities.
61
55,360,602
97
106,340,477
36
50,979,875
This increase of banks, following the general expansion of business,
brought with it the necessity of some improved means of adjusting
the daily mutual balances. The fifty-five banks in New York city,
for example, were each compelled to settle as many accounts daily.
To obviate that great labor the clearing system was devised. Each
bank sends every morning to the clearing-house all the checks and
demands it may have received the day previous, in the course of
business, upon all others. These in a short time are interchanged,
and a balance struck and paid. This system was established in
1853, and the amount of the exchanges and balances annually were
as follows:
Year
Amount exchanged
Balances
1854
l8cc ...
$5,750,455,987.06
5,362,912,098.33
6,906,213,328.47
8,333,226.718.06
4,756,664,386.09
6,448,005,956.01
7,231,143,056.69
5,915,742,758.05
$297,411,493
289,694,13;
334.714,48?
365,3i3,90»
3i4,238,9i<
363,984,68;
308,693,43^
353,383,94^
i8c6
1857
1858.
1850.
i860
1861
Total for eight years
50,704,364,288.76
2,627,434,99:
With the develoi)mcnt of business the transactions grew immense!)
up to 1858, when they fell off nearly one-half under the panic of that
year. They recovered gradually uj) to the breaking out of the rebd-
lion. The banks of Boston and Philadelphia adoj^tt'd the same sy»
CURRENCY, BANKING, AND STATE DEBTS
515
tem with similar results. The figures indicate to what an extent
the credits of individuals, created in the operations of business, are
cancelled through the intervention of the banks of the cities where
the commerce of the whole country centralizes.
In the States of Illinois, Mississippi, Arkansas and Florida, after
the collapse of 1837, no banks were again created up to 1850, and the
three last named are still without them, with the exception of two
small ones in Florida. Texas has a small bank at Galveston, and
Utah, Oregon, and New Mexico have none. In the District of
Columbia four old banks expired by limitation of charter in the
hands of trustees, and Congress refused to recharter them; but they
continue to transact business.
It is probable that a large portion of the increase in banking,
particularly at the west, has been due to the introduction of the
security system of New York, the idea of which seemed to popularize
that which had previously been in bad odor. The following table
shows the States which have adopted the free banking principle in
whole or in part:
States
New York. . . .
Michigan
New Jersey. . .
Virginia
Illinois
Ohio
Indiana
Wisconsin . . . .
Missouri
Tennessee . . . .
Louisiana
Iowa
Minnesota. . . .
Massachusetts
Total . . . .
Year
adopted
1838
1849
1850
1851
1851
1851
1852
1854
1856
1852
1853
1858
1858
1859
i860
Stocks held Circulation
$26,897,874
192,831
962,911
3,584,078
9,826,691
2,153,552
1,349,466
5,031,504
725,670
1,233,432
5,842,096
101,849
50,000
57,951,954
$29,959,506
222,197
4,811,832
9,812,197
8,981,723
7,983,889
5,390,246
4,429,855
7,884,885
5,538,378
11,579.313
568,806
50,000
97,212,827
5i6 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
V. Currency and Coinage
A. Currencies and their MovementSy 1852 *
The movement of coin and bank notes during the period 1836-1849 indicates
several important monetary laws as follows: (i) seasonal demands for money;
(2) tendency of a cheaper money to drive a dearer money out of circulation; and (3)
settlement of balances of trade.
Our foreign commerce has not only affected the specie in our
country, but it has had a general influence also upon the circulation
of our banks. Prior to the acquisition of California in 1848, the
production of gold and silver annually by our mines, was but little
over half a million of dollars. About $2,000,000 more than the
products of our mines were needed annually to satisfy the pride of
the people, and supply them with utensils and ornaments; and to
keep pace with the increase of our population, requires an increase
of coin of $2,500,000 annually; so that we needed about $5,000,000
annually to supply the wants of the country, and have a sufficient
specie basis to sustain our banks, and maintain the credit of our paper
currency. The amount of specie in the United States is so exceedingly
small, in proportion to the population and commercial wants of the
country, that large importations of foreign goods, and an exportation
of specie to the amount of $4,000,000 or $5,000,000 a year, for two or
three years in succession, will inevitably weaken the banks very much,
produce a panic, and a run upon many of them, and cause many
failures, if not a general suspension of specie payments. This is veri-
fied by the commercial revulsion from 1837 to 1842. In May, 1837,
nearly all the banks in the United States suspended specie payments;
during the year ending September 30th, 1838, our imports amounted
to but $108,486,616, including $17,747,116 specie, and but little over
$90,000,000 in merchandise and foreign products; our exports the same
year amounted to $113,717,404, including but $3,508,046 in specie
that is we exported exclusive of specie, over $110,000,000 in amoimt,
and imported but little over $90,000,000; paid off several millions of
debts, and got a balance of over $14,000,000 specie to sustain our
banks. This enabled nearly all the banks in the old States, and many
in the new ones, to resume specie payments during the spring and
summer of the year 1838, and to go on for some time prosperously;
but the free-trade compromise act again invited large importations
of foreign goods, amounting, during the year ending September 30th,
» Essays on the Progress of Nations. By Ezra C. Seaman (New York, 1852),
362-4.
CURRENCY, BANKING, AND STATE DEBTS 517
1839, to $162,092,132, including only $5,595,176 in specie; while our
exports were but $112,251,673, exclusive of specie to the amount of
$8,776,743; showing a nominal balance of trade against us that
year of about $44,000,000; a drain of over $3,000,000 of specie from
the country, and a large increase of our foreign debt.
This large balance of trade against us and drain of specie, occa-
sioned a second suspension of specie payments on the 9th of October,
1839, by Mr. Biddle's United States Bank of Pennsylvania, which
was soon after followed by nearly all the banks south and west of the
State of New York. No other country ever felt so quickly and
sensibly, and suffered so severely, the disastrous effects of excessive
importations of foreign goods, and an unfavorable balan,ce of trade;
for no other country ever had so small an amount of specie in propor-
tion to the extent of their commerce; and in no other country was the
credit system ever carried to so great an extent, upon a foundation
so slight and frail.
The amount of specie in the United States, October ist, 1839,
being about $73,000,000, and October ist, 1842, but $62,000,000,
in round numbers; the quantity in the banks $45,000,000, in 1839,
and but $33,545,000, December, 1842, averaging about $39,000,000,
left in circulation, including what was hoarded up and withdrawn
from use, from $28,000,000 to $29,000,000.
When specie is exported it is withdrawn entirely from the vaults
of the banks in the commercial cities, and they draw the specie from
the banks of the country and the interior cities, and the amount in
circulation is scarcely affected at all Export two years in succession
to pay for foreign goods, $5,000,000 each year more specie than is
imported, accompanied by a great increase of debt by means of heavy
importations, these $10,000,000 being withdrawn from the banks,
reduces their specie to about $30,000,000, and this, of itself, will often
produce a panic and a run upon the banks, and cause a draw upon
them of $5,000,000 or $10,000,000 more, and thereby occasion a failure
of many of them, and perhaps a general suspension of specie payments.
The suspension of October, 1839, was occasioned by the exportation
of specie, and the heavy importations of goods the previous year,
though the balance of specie exported was but little over $3,000,000;
and the suspension of May, 1837, was in consequence of the immense
importation of foreign goods; the rapid accumulation of a heavy
foreign debt, and the anticipation of large exportations of specie to
pay it; the great expansion of the banks, and their heavy loans to
speculators who could not pay. All these things contributed to create
5i8
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
a panic, and induce a withdrawal of deposits, and a run upon the bank>
and soon led to a general suspension of specie payments in self defenct
and before the anticipated exportation of specie to pay our foreign
debt has commenced. . . .
Statement of the amount of bank-notes issued to each inhabitant,
and the estimated amount of coin and bank-notes in circulation,
in each of the following divisions of the United States, at the date of
their reports nearest to the last day of December of each of the under-
mentioned years.
Maine, N. Hamp. & Vt
Mass., Rhode Is., & Conn
N. York, N. Jersey, & Pa
Ohio & other Northwestern States,
including Iowa
Del., Md., Dist. of Col., Va. & N. Car.
Ky., Tenn., & Mo
Slave States South of 35° of latitude.
United States
1836
Bknts,
$5^
15!
12
61
4f
I4f
9^
1842
Bknts,
$ 2f
9I
4i
ll
3f
2^
4i
3l
1842 1845 1845
Coin and
Bknts. Bknts. Bknts,
$ 4
II
58
3\
4i
4
5^
5
$4
18
61
2
5l
5
4
%5h
i9i
8i
3^
7
6i
61
7i
1849
Bknts.
$ 5
16
7
2I
6
S
5i
5l
For some months, annually, after harvest, including the fall and
forepart of the winter, the bank-notes of the commercial and manu-
facturing States are sent into the agricultural States to pay for agri-
cultural products; and during that portion of the year, the circulating
money of the agricultural States is greater than is indicated in the
above table; but the merchants soon collect the greater portion of
it and send it to the commercial cities to pay for goods; so that during
half or more of the year, it is much less, and perhaps did not average
more than is above stated, during the years referred to.
Bank paper being a cheaper currency than coin, its natural ten-
dency is to displace coin, and induce its e.xportation and consumption
in the arts. The balance of trade being generally in favor of manu-
facturing and commercial, and against agricultural States, the ten-
dencies of trade are to drain the latter of their coin, and to transfer
it to the former. The i)roducts of manufacturing labor, when sold in
the markets of the commercial world, amount to about twice as much
as those of agricultural labor employed in either cold or temperate
CURRENCY, BANKING, AND STATE DEBTS 519
climates; but not so when the latter is employed in the culture of cot-
ton, sugar, coffee, and other tropical products, in a soil and climate
adapted to them. Labor employed in mining and manufacturing in
Great Britain, or in the United States, is more than twice as produc-
tive as agricultural labor can be made in Ohio and the North-western
States. In fact, the average income of the people of the manufacturing
States of Massachusetts and Rhode Island, and of Great Britain, is
more than twice as great as that of the agricultural State of Ohio,
and nearly twice as great as that of the agricultural State of Vermont.
A majority of mankind are inclined to spend all they can earn,
and all they can get credit for, and as the wants of agricultural
communities are generally greater than their incomes, they often
buy more than they can pay for with their crops within the year; and
hence agricultural countries are usually involved in debt; the balance
of trade is almost universally against them; and this drains them of
the precious metals, and tends to depress their industry and the price
of their products still more. Poverty, and nothing but poverty, a
want of ability to pay promptly, and a loss or diminution of credit,
tends to check importations, and to restore the balance of trade, by
lessening the demand for, and the price of goods, and the inducement
to import them.
As long as the balance of trade is against a country, it must either
export its specie to pay such balance, or buy on credit, accumulate
a debt, and eventually be drained of its specie to pay interest, as well
as the principal of the debt. Bank-notes may, for a time, supply
the place of coin, and thus afford a temporary remedy; but, in the
end, they aggravate the evil. By inflating the currency in some
instances, and in others keeping it full, they keep up, and often raise
the price of both domestic and foreign products, and thereby tend
to prevent the exportation of domestic products; to encourage im-
portations; to increase both the quantity and value of goods imported,
and exports of specie to pay for them; and to diminish the industry
of the country by depriving its own citizens of the benefit of its markets
for their products. The necessary consequence is, a run upon the
banks for coin, a great diminution in their circulation, many failures
of banks, and numerous bankruptcies among the people, attended
with a depression of property and industry, and wide-spread embar-
rassment throughout the country. Such a revulsion necessarily
checks importations for a time, and as exportation goes on as usual,
the balance of trade is eventually turned in its favor; specie again
flows in, and the country partially recovers from its embarrassment.
520 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
B. Early Coinage, ijgi-iS^o *
The first coinage act of the United States, which was passed in 1792. provid
for the coinage of gold, silver and copper coins. The important provisions of t!
act and those which followed during the next forty years were' as follows:
On the 2d April, 1792, a code of laws was enacted for the
establishment and regidation of the mint, under which, with slight
amendments, the coinage was executed for forty-two years.
The denominations of coin, with their rates, were as follows:
Gold. The eagle of ten_dollar.s^tp weigh 27o^rains, the half and
quarter in proportion; all of the fineness of 22 carats, or 917
thousandths.
Silver. The dollar of 100 cents, to weigh 416 grains; the half,
quarter, tenth or dime, and twentieth or half-dime, in proportion;
the fineness to be 1485 parts in 1664, or 892.4 thousandths.
Copper. The cent, to weigh 264 grains; the half-cent in proportion.
Since the act of 1792, the following alterations in the standards
have been made: —
On the 14th January, 1793, the weight of the cent was reduced to
208 grains; the half-cent in proportion.
January 26th, 1796. President Washington issued a proclamation
(as he had been empowered to do by law,) that, "on account of the
increased price of copper, and the expense of coinage," the cent would
be reduced to 7 dwts. or 168 grains, and the half-cent in proportion.
The copper coins have since remained at this standard.
June 28th, 1834. An act was passed, changing the weight and
fineness of the gold coins, and the relative value of gold to silver.
Before stating the alterations, it may be proper to observe, that the
estimate of gold as being worth fifteen times as much as silver, which
was the original basis, was found too low at the market value; which,
although always fluctuating, was nearer sixteen to one, upon a general
average. The effect of our legal proportions was to reduce the coin-
age of gold, and to restrain its circulation; being always at a premium,
the coin was immediately exported to Europe, in the course of trade,
and there quickly wrought into other shapes.
To provide a remedy for this evil, engaged the attention of some
of our most eminent statesmen for a series of fifteen years. At length,
in June, 1834, the weight of the eagle was reduced by law to 258 grains,
(the parts in proportion,) of which 232 grains must be fine gold, mak-
ing the fineness 21 carats 2 ^| car. grains, or Sgg-f^i^ thousandth*.
» Hunt's Merchants' Afaiozine (New York, 1844), X, 244-^.
CURRENCY, BANKING, AND STATE DEBTS
521
This was an increase of 6 yVoV P^^" cent on the former value of gold.
The silver coinage was not changed.
The disadvantages of the complex standards of fineness, both in
gold and silver, which were difficult to be expressed or remembered,
and very inconvenient in regard to the frequent calculations which
were based upon them, early determined the present director to
endeavor to effect an improvement. The standard of nine-tenths
fine, as adopted in France and some other countries, was obviously
the most simple, and, upon every consideration, the most suitable.
To bring our silver coins to that porportion, without changing the
amount of fine silver in them, it was only necessary to put
less copper, by 3^ grains, in the dollar, reducing its weight to
41 2 1 grains. The weight of the gold was not to be changed,
but the fineness increased about three-fourths of one thousandth,
a difference far within the scope of the legal allowance, and of
course hardly appreciable. These proportions were incorporated
in a carefully digested and consoUdated code of Mint Laws,
which was enacted by Congress, in January, 1837. By that act,
the eagle is to be 900 thousandths fine, and to weigh 258 grains; the
half and quarter in proportion; and the [silver] dollar, at the same fine-
ness, to weigh 412^ grains; the parts in proportion. The allowed
deviation in fineness, for gold, is from 898 to 902; for silver, 897 to 903.
The following is a recapitulation of the various standards, of the
gold and silver coins: —
Act of April 2, 1792
Act of June 28, 1834. . .
Act of January 18, 1837
Gold Eagle
Silver
Dollar
Weight,
Grains
Fineness,
Thous.
Weight,
Grains
Fineness,
Thous.
270
258
258
916.7
899.2
900
416
412.5
892.4
900
It will be proper, in concluding this article, to explain briefly the
organization of the mint of the United States. Until the year 1835,
there was but one institution, which was located at Philadelphia.
In that year three branches of the mint were created by act of Congress.
Two of these were for the coinage of gold only, and were to be situated
at the towns of Charlotte, in North Carolina, and Dahlonega, in
Georgia — central points of the gold mining region. The third
branch was for both gold and silver, and located at New Orleans,
522 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
the commercial emporium of the southwest. These three institu-
tions, which, in the view of the law are not distinct mints, but rath(
branches of the mint, are respectively managed by superintendent
who are under the control of the director of the parent mint. Th
branches went into operation in the year 1838. Their coinage i
uniform with that of the establishment at Philadelphia, being S} -
tematically tested there for approval.
The whole mint establishment, thus constituted, is itself a bureau
or branch of the treasury department of the general government,
and is under the supervision of the secretary of the treasury.
The coinage at the principal mint in 1843 amounted to $6,530-
043 20; comprising $4,062,010 in gold, $2,443,750 in silver, and
$24,283 20 in copper coins, and composed of 10,405,233 pieces.
The deposites of gold, within the year, amounted to $4,107,807, and
those of silver to $2,357,830.
At the New Orleans branch mint, the coinage amounted to
$4,568,000; comprising $3,177,000 in gold, and $1,391,000 in silver
coins, and composed of 4,030,239 pieces. The deposites for coinage
amounted to $3,138,990 in gold, and $1,384,320 in silver.
The branch mint at Dahlonega received, during the year, deposites
of gold to the value of $570,080, and its coinage amounted to $582,-
782 50; composed of 98,452 half-eagles, and 36,209 quarter-eagles.
The branch mint at Charlotte received deposites of gold to the
value of $272,064, and its coinage amounted to $287,005; composed
of 44,353 half-eagles, and 26,096 quarter-eagles. . . .
The whole coinage in the United States, during the past year,
amounts to within a small fraction of $12,000,000, and exceeds, by
more than one-half, that of any former year. Of this coinage, more
than $8,000,000 is in gold; showing a greater proportion to silver
than has heretofore been presented.
The branch mints at Charlotte and Dahlonega have each coined
nearly double the amount which they have reached in any former
year, and the New Orleans mint nearly quadruple.
VI. State Debts
A mount and Character in 18^2 *
The attempts of the states to build internal improvements very generally
failed, and as a consequence they found themselves burdened with heavy debtl.
In 1852 the debts and resources of the diflerent states were as follows:
' Report of the Commissioner of Patents for the Year 1852 Agriculture. (Wash-
ington, 1853), 41^x9-
CURRENCY, BANKING, AND STATE DEBTS
523
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CHAPTER XVI
POPULATION AND LABOR, 1820-1860
I. Condition of the American Laborer
A. Prosperity of the American Laborer, i8j6 ^
Travelers in the United States before the Civil War often remarked about the
prosperous condition of the American laborer. There was no great wealth in the
hands of individuals; and there was little poverty. There was plenty of food and
clothing for all and those necessities were very evenly distributed. Conditions
that obtained in Europe among the working classes were almost unknown in the
United States, where laborers were scarce and wages relatively )iigh. An EngUsh
traveler, the Honorable Charles Augustus Murray, gave his impressions of the
situation as follows:
In examining the structure of society in any country, it would
seem natural to commence with that class which forms its basement
or foundation. If such be the proper course in examining the con-
dition of other countries, more especially must it be so in America,
where the operative or labouring class is possessed of privileges and
power so great as to render it, in fact, master both of the government
and of the constitution. I am well aware that the phrase "labouring
class" is distasteful in the United States to those to whom it is ap-
plied; but that is of little consequence, so long as the reader under-
stands that I use it in reference to all labourers and artisans, and to
those in general who earn their daily bread by the sweat of their brow.
It is this class, this broad basis of society, which strikes the traveller
in America with the greatest surprise and admiration, and of which
the native American may be justly proud. Pauperism, that gaunt
and hideous spectre, which has extended its desolating march over
Asia and Europe, destroying its victims by thousands, even in the
midst of luxury and wealth, has never yet carried its ravages into the
United States: this is a blessing of which it is to be feared that few
appreciate the magnitude, and which is, of itself, a preponderating
weight in the balance of national happiness.
* Travels in North America. By Charles Augustus Murray (London, 1839),
II. 297-8.
POPULATION AND LABOR
525
Among the thousands and tens of thousands whom the tide of
emigration annually pours into the Atlantic seaports, and many of
whom arrive without money or friends, or health, or skill wherewith
to procure subsistence, great numbers suffer the extremities of hard-
ship and want, especially in the neighbourhood of the towns where
they are set ashore; but these cases can have no reference whatever
to the internal condition of the United States; and it is a fact no less
surprising than pleasing to record, that, during two years spent in
travehng through every part of the Union, I have only once been
asked for alms, and that once was by a female who was very unwell,
and who, although decently dressed, told me that she wanted a bit
of money to buy some food.
B. Unfavorable View of American Labor, 184J ^
There were those, however, who took a pessimistic view of American laboring
conditions, due in some cases to a preconceived determination to see only the
worst side, and in other cases to disappointments, caused by not finding conditions
as favorable as they expected them to be.
[January 20] ... It is much easier to obtain employment, at
present, in the United States than in England; but in this respect
they are getting into a worse and worse condition. The manu-
facturers, in the East, have introduced all our improvements in ma-
chinery, (and the effects are the same as in this country) they are
making very large quantities of goods; competition is increasing,
prices are very much reduced, and the wages of labour, generally,
throughout the States and Canada, have been reduced from thirty
to fifty per cent within the last four years, and wages are still reduc-
ing in some parts of the country, in spite of their trades' unions and
democratic institutions; and, if competition continue, no parties
can prevent wages from falling as low there as they are in England,
and this within a comparatively short period. Wages in America
are not much higher, even now, than they are with us. Agricultural
labourers can be hired, in Illinois and other states, for from eight to
twelve dollars per month. Smiths and mechanics for from twelve
to eighteen dollars per month, with board. The boarding of labourers
of all kinds is almost universal in the small towns and villages in the
agricultural districts. They think nothing of board and lodging in
the west; it can be found them well for from $1 to $1.50 or 4 s. to 6 s.
^ Documentary History of American Industrial Society. Edited by John R.
Commons and others (Cleveland, 1910), VII, 47-51. Printed by permission of
the publishers, The Arthur H. Clark Company.
526 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
per week. At Baltimore iron works the labourers earn about 2 s. 8 1
per day, and the head men, at the furnaces, get about $1, or 4 s.
day. In Pittsburg the wages of the labourers, at the iron works,
about the same. A few of the principal workmen, at the iron worl
earn as much as $2 per day. At the founderies and engineering
establishments, at Paterson, near New York, the average wages of
labour throughout the works is only about 4s. 6 d. per day now; and
this may be taken as a fair average of the wages of engineers [machin-
ists] and founders, in the eastern cities; great numbers were out of
employ when I landed, in May last; but the trade is much better,
and very few are out of work now. In the great lead district of
Galena there are about 40 smelt works, and first-rate smelters earn
25 s. per week; second-rate smelters, i8s. per week; labourers at the
smelt works, 16 s. per week, and carters, 15 s. per week, all without
board; but wages are paid in Galena with cash, not in truck, as in
most places. The miners were getting 5 s. 8d. per 112 lbs. for their
lead ore, and pig lead was selling at 9 s. 6d. per cwt., 112 lbs. The
wages of labour was double what it is now, in Galena, in 1838. Great
quantities of sale shoes and boots are made in and about Salem, in
Massachusetts; the workmen can earn only about 16 s. per week;
and the shoes are sold as cheap as sale shoes are sold in England.
Tailors generally get good wages, but they are not usually well em-
ployed ; their wages are about 6 s. per day. Bricklayers, stonemasons,
and plasterers earn as much as tailors. This will give some idea of
the rate of wages.
The price of fuel, and the rents of houses for labourers are very
high in all the eastern states; food is also much higher there than in
the west. It is highest at Boston and New York, but even there,
food is from 25 to 50 per cent cheaper than in Liverpool. Rents are
high in all parts of the Union, and clothing is higher than it is with
us. Wood fuel can be had for merely the expense of cutting and
preparing in most parts of the west. On the banks of the Ohio and
Mississippi the steam-boats are supplied at from 4 s. to 6 s. per cord
of 8 feet by 4 feet, and 4 feet high, and coals can be had at Pittsburg,
and on the Ohio, for less than 5 s. per ton. Pork, beef, and mutton
are bought in Indiana, Illinois, and other western states, at from
id. to I Jd. per lb. Our friend C. F. Green, killed a cow in New Har-
mony while we were there, and he could scarcely sell it at that price,
on credit. A whole carcass of good mutton sells there for a dollar,
eggs are sold at 2d. per dozen, good fowls at 4s. per dozen, butter at
3d. to 4 d. per lb., Indian corn yd. to 10 d. per bushel, wheat at $.50
POPULATION AND LABOR 527
to $.60 or 2S. to 2 s. 6 d. per bushel. Most of these articles are more
than double these prices in the eastern states, owing to their not
growing enough for themselves, and the expense of carriage from the
far west. Apples, pears, peaches, &c., are very plentiful and very
cheap in the west. We saw whole orchards of fine apples in Indiana
and Kentucky rotting on the trees, not being considered worth the
expense of gathering. The same evil exists in the western states of
; America, as respects agricultural produce, as we find in England as
to manufactured goods; excessive competition, and consequent re-
ductions in wages, have driven so many from the eastern states, to
cultivate land in the west, added to the shoals of emigrants daily
arriving from other countries, that the produce is so abundant, it
can scarcely be sold for the expense of taking it fifty miles to a market,
and prices will still go lower and lower as more and more land is
brought into cultivation, till the man who cultivates his own land
will not be able to get a living, as is now the case with our friend C. F.
Green, with a most beautiful and fertile farm of 140 acres freehold.
One of the greatest evils the working classes have to contend with
in the United States and in Canada, for it is generally practised in
both countries, is the abominable cheating truck system, which is
carried on with more barefaced impudence there, and to a greater
extent than it ever was practised in this country. The following
is a verbatim copy of a printed notice given by Ben. Cozzens, a large
manufacturer, who has two large cotton factories and a print work,
and employs from a thousand to fifteen hundred pair of hands, at
Crompton mills in Rhode Island. Single men at board, who cannot
take goods, have ten per cent deducted from their wages in lieu of it.
NOTICE. Those employed at these mills and works will take notice, that a
store is kept for their accommodation, where they can purchase the best of goods
at fair prices, and it is expected that all will draw their goods from said store.
Those who do not are informed, that there are plenty of others who would be glad
to take their places at less wages.
BENJ. COZZENS.
Crompton Mills, February, 1843.
One of the printed notices, from which this was copied, was put
?into my hands by a man who lately worked for Benjamin Cozzens,
and who has returned home, tired of America, in the Roscius. Five
colliers returned home by the same vessel, who had been working
at Pittsville, in Pennsylvania, where the same vile truck system is
carried on to the greatest extent. They declared that when their
* American wages were turned into cash, they could earn as much, and
528 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
were as well ofif, in their own country. I know the general prevalence
of this system, by information from masters as well as men. The
average of loss to the workmen by this system is not less than twenty-
five per cent of their wages, and in many cases it is attended with a
loss of fifty per cent. When masters have no shops of their own, they
give notes to the men to get their goods at other shops, who supply
them wath inferior articles at high prices, and out of the money the
workmen are cheated of, they allow a per centage to the master.
In many places the shopkeepers will not give flour and groceries for
these notes; they tell them these are cash articles only, in which case
the men are compelled to take other goods which they do not want,
and then have to submit to a still greater loss in disposing of them
for cash to get absolute necessaries. At Shreeve's iron and nail works,
in Cincinnati, and at other cut nail works, the workmen are paid in
casks of cut nails, charged at high prices, by which they lose at least
twenty-five per cent in all they receive. When I told the masters
that we have severe laws against this infanious practice; they replied,
''Here we do as we like; ours is a free country." Yes, America is
as free for working men as England, for in both countries, when trade
is bad, the workmen must labour on such terms as are offered, or go
without employment and starve. The condition of the working
classes in America, however, is much better at present than it is here;
but my conviction, from all I have seen and heard in America, is,
that the wages of labour are everywhere falling, and that the condi-
tion of the labourer is gradually becoming worse.
II. Improvements in Manufactures
Labor-saving Machinery and the Demand for Labor ^ i8j2 ^
The introduction of labor-saving machinery has often been opposed by the
laborers whom it has displaced. Such opposition in the United States was never
as great as it was in England, yet it was present, though neutralized by the scarcity
of labor and the abundance of public land. In the long run, however, those dis-
placed by machinery tend the machines or seek employment in new fields.
The objection usually urged against improvements in machinery,
is, that the poor are deprived of employment. It is true, that at t
introduction of an invention which produces the same quantity with
less labour than was before required, some of the labourers are thrown
out of employment — but this though a serious evil is a transient one^
» American Quarterly Review (Philadelphia, 1832), No. XXIV, 312.
POPULATION AND LABOR 529
and not for a moment to be weighed against the permanent advan-
tages which result from the improvement to the community generally,
and particularly to the labourers themselves. The commodity is not
only furnished to them in common with others at a cheaper rate,
but the lasting effect of every improvement in machinery is, increased
employment. This can be proved by innumerable facts — and is a
conclusion which might be arrived at by a priori reasoning. It has
been shown that by the cost of production being diminished the
price is diminished; the price being diminished, the demand is* in-
creased; if the demand is increased, in order to supply that demand,
a proportionably greater quantity of the commodity must be pro-
duced, and to produce this augmented supply, a greater number of
labourers is required. It has generally been found in practice that
the increased demand consequent upon diminished price has been
so great, that many more labourers were required to supply it even
with the improved machines, than were required to supply the old
demand with the old machines, although they required more labourers
to work them.
III. The Factory System
A. Conditions at Waltham and Lynn, 18 j^ ^
One of the first important centers of the factory system was Lowell, Massa-
chusetts. Conditions there were good, and apparently typical of the conditions
to be found in the other manufacturing centers of textile goods. They have been
described from several angles by different observers. Other factory centers in
Massachusetts were Waltham and Lynn. The latter place was at an early date
— and has continued to be down to the present time — an important center for the
manufacture of shoes. Miss Martineau visited these places during the thirties
and afterward recorded her impressions as follows:
I visited the corporate factory-establishment at Waltham, within
a few miles of Boston. The Waltham Mills were at work before those
of Lowell were set up. The establishment is for the spinning and
weaving of cotton alone, and the construction of the requisite
machinery. Five hundred persons were employed at the time of
my visit. The girls earn two, and some three, dollars a-week, besides
their board. The little children earn one dollar a-week. Most of
the girls live in the houses provided by the corporation, which
accommodate from six to eight each. When sisters come to the
mill, it is a common practice for them to bring their mother to keep
Society in America. By Harriet Martineau (London, 1837), II, 247-50.
530 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
house for them and some of their companions, in a dwelling built I
their own earnings. In this case, they save enough out of their
board to clothe themselves, and have their two or three dollars a-week
to spare. Some have thus cleared off mortgages from their fathers'
farms; others have educated the hope of the family at college; aii<i
many are rapidly accumulating an independence. I saw a who! j
street of houses built with the earnings of the girls; some with piazz;!
and green Venetian blinds; and all neat and sufficiently spaciou
The factory people built the church, which stands conspicuous
on the green in the midst of the place. The minister's salary (eight
hundred dollars last year) is raised by a tax on the pews. The cor-
poration gave them a building for a lyceum, which they have fur-
nished with a good library, and where they have lectures every
winter, — the best that money can procure. The girls have, in many
instances, private libraries of some merit and value.
The managers of the various factory establishments keep the
wages as nearly equal as possible, and then let the girls freely shift
about from one to another. When a girl comes to the overseer to
inform him of her intention of working at the mill, he welcomes her,
and asks how long she means to stay. It may be six months, or a
year, or five years, or for life. She declares what she considers her-
self fit for, and sets to work accordingly. If she finds that she cannot
work so as to keep up with the companion appointed to her, or to
please her employer or herself, she comes to the overseer, and volun-
teers to pick cotton, or sweep the rooms, or undertake some other
service that she can perform.
The people work about seventy hours per week, on the average.
The time of work varies with the length of the days, the wages con-
tinuing the same. All look like well-dressed young ladies. The
health is good; or rather, (as this is too much to be said about health
anywhere in the United States,) it is no worse than it is elsewhere.
These facts speak for themselves. There is no need to enlarge
on the pleasure of an acquaintance with the operative classes of the
United States.
The shoe-making at Lynn is carried on almost entirely in private
dwellings, from the circumstance that the people who do it are
almost all farmers or fishermen likewise. A stranger who has not
been enlightened upon the ways of the ])lace would be astonished
at the number of small square erections, like miniature school-houses,
standing each as an appendage to a dwelling-house. These are the
**shoe shops," where the father of the family and his boys work,
POPULATION AND LABOR 531
while the women within are employed in binding and trimming.
Thirty or more of these shoe-shops may be counted in a walk of half-
a-mile. When a Lynn shoe manufacturer receives an order, he issues
the tidings. The leather is cut out by men on his premises; and
then the work is given to those who apply for it; if possible, in small
quantities, for the sake of dispatch. The shoes are brought home
on Friday night, packed off on Saturday, and in a fortnight or three
weeks are on the feet of dwellers in all parts of the Union. The
whole family works upon shoes during the winter; and in the summer,
the father and sons turn out into the fields, or go fishing. . . .
B. Superiority of the Operatives, 18 jj ^
Another English traveler, Patrick Shirreff, "Farmer," visited Lowell in 1835.
The superiority of the mill operatives over the same class in England was noticed
by this traveler and recorded as follows:
The females engaged in manufacturing amount to nearly 5000,
and as we arrived at Lowell on the afternoon of Saturday, we had
an opportunity of seeing those connected with some of the largest
cotton factories retiring from labour. All were clean, neat, and
fashionably attired, with reticules hanging on their arms, and calashes
on their heads. They commonly walked arm in arm without dis-
playing levity. Their general appearance and deportment was such
that few British gentlemen, in the middle ranks of life, need have
been ashamed of leading any one of them to a tea-party. Next day,
being Sunday, we saw the young females belonging to the factories
going to church in their best attire, when the favourable impressions
of the preceding evening were not effaced. They lodge, generally,
in boarding-houses, and earn about 8 s. 6d. sterling per week, inde-
pendent of board; serving girls earn about 4s. 3d. •
The recent introduction of large manufacturing establishments, \J
thin population, and ample reward of labour, account for the apparent
comfort and propriety of the Lowell young women. The situation
of the manufacturing class in Britain is very different; nurtured amidst
poverty and vice, they toil in crowded and unwholesome factories
from infancy, often disregarded by parents and employers, and
attaining maturity ruined in constitution and in morals, with few
of the sympathies of humanity.
The factories and dwelling-houses at Lowell are mostly composed
^ A Tour Through North America. By Patrick Shirreff (Edinburgh, 1835),
45-6.
532 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
of brick, although good building stone is to be had everywhere. The
people seem to be influenced by habit in house-building at Lowell;
a wooden dwelling-house was being erected where rock, which had
been dug from the cellar, was obstructing its progress, and thousands
of loads of stones quarried in forming a railway, were lying at not
more than one hundred yards distant. Here I saw a stone arch
building across a lateral branch of the canal, which was the only
bridge of that material I saw — wood generally being used for their
construction. Many large sized dwelling-houses and factories were
in the progress of erection.
C. Home Life of the Mill Operatives, 1854 ^
The home life of the mill operatives appears to have been exceptionally good,
and it attracted the attention of English travelers, whose ideas of factory life and
work were gathered from the squalid surroundings of the Manchester (England)
factories.
Furnished with letters from Mr. Abbott Lawrence, I visited
Lowell, famous for its factories belonging to a corporation, and for
its factory girls, better known by the more elegant title of the "young
ladies" of Lowell. About an hour's railway drive brought me to
that phenomenon to an Englishman, a smokeless factory town cano-
pied by an Italian sky. Here, water, pure, sparkling, and mighty
in strength, from the Merrimack river, does the duty of steam-engines,
driving huge wheels and turbines attached to enormous factories.
To describe these is unnecessary, as they differ but little in their in-
ternal economy from those in our manufacturing districts. There
are eight manufacturing corporations and thirty-five mills, which pro-
duce 2,139,000 yards of piece-goods weekly, consisting of sheetings,
shirtings, drillings, and printing cloths. These are fully equal in
quality to similar goods manufactured in England. Not being in
the trade, the "young ladies" interested me more than the spinning-
jennies or looms; and, before I had gone through one mill, I was
ready to admit that the difference between a Manchester factory
girl and a Lowell "young lady," is great indeed. The latter is gen-
erally good-looking, often pretty, dresses fashionably, wears her hair
d Vlmpiralrice or d la Chinoise, and takes delight in finery, and flowers,
which give a gay appearance to the factory rooms. But it would be
unfair to institute a comparison between the Manchester and Lowell
» A Vacation Tour in the UniUd States and Canada. By Charles Richard Weld
(London, 1855), 50-3.
POPULATION AND LABOR 533
factory girl; as the former is born in that hard school where work is
a life-long taskmaster, while the latter is generally the daughter or
relative of a substantial farmer, who enters the mills for the purpose
of gaining a little independence, and seldom remains there more than
a few years. Thus the employment takes higher rank than with
us, and the "young ladies" live in a manner that would greatly aston-
ish an English factory girl. Requesting permission to see one of the
Lowell boarding-houses, where the "young ladies" reside, I was
directed to the establishment usually shown to visitors; but, conceiv-
ing it desirable to step aside from the beaten track, I knocked at the
door of a different house. The residences of the "young ladies" are
excellent, forming rows separated by wide streets, shaded by a pro-
fusion of trees, and bright with flowers. My request to be permitted
to see the house did not meet with ready assent. After some parley
with the servant, the mistress appeared, and made particular in-
quiries respecting the object of my visit, adding, it was not her cus-
tom to show her house to strangers. This made me the more desirous
of gaining admission; and having succeeded in satisfying the lady I
was merely a curious Englishman, she allowed me to enter, and took
great pains in showing me her establishment, assuring me had she
been aware of my visit she would have put her house in order. But
it needed no preparation to convince me the "young ladies" are
admirably provided for. A large sitting-room occupied a considerable
portion of the basement floor, beyond which was the refectory; above
were airy bedrooms, well furnished, containing from two to four beds.
The provisions, which my conductress insisted I should taste, were
excellent; and when I add the "young ladies" are waited on, and
have their clothes washed, with the exception of their laces, &c.,
which they prefer washing themselves, it will be 'seen they are very
comfortable. For their board and lodging they pay six dollars a
month, one-sixth of which is paid by the corporation; and as their
average earnings are about three and a half dollars a week, it is evi-
dent that, if not extravagant in their dress, they have it in their power
to save a considerable sum yearly. But I fear, from the number of
gay bonnets, parasols, and dresses which I saw in the "young ladies' "
apartments, a large proportion of the weekly wages is spent on these
objects. At the same time it is right to add that the strictest pro-
priety reigns throughout their community, comprising 1870 females;
and it was gratifying to hear that, although the famous Lowell
Offering periodical has been discontinued, the books borrowed from
the town library, for the use of which half a dollar is paid yearly,
534 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
are of a healthy literary nature. The total number of operatives
at Lowell when I visited it was nearly 10,000, and their savings in-
vested in the bank of deposit 1,104,000 dollars.
D. Hours of Labor J 1845 ^
There was, however, a dark side to the picture presented by our English
travelers. The hours of labor were long and the work arduous, and even though
conditions at Lowell were better than those to be found in English mills, thr
merited and received the criticism of a legislative investigating committee in 1845.
That part of the committee's report dealing with hours of labor is as follows:
During our short stay in Lowell, we gathered many facts, which
we deem of sufficient importance to state in this report, and first, in
relation to the Hours of Labor.
From Mr. Clark, the agent of the Merrimack Corporation, we
obtained the following table of the time which the mills run during
the year.
Begin work. From ist May to 31st August, at 5 o'clock. From
ist September to 30th April, as soon as they can see.
Breakfast. From ist November to 28th February, before going
to work. From ist March to 31st of March, at 7 J o'clock. From
ist April to 19th September, at seven o'clock. From 20th September
to 31st October, at 7 J o'clock. Return in half an hour.
Dinner. Through the year at 12^ o'clock. From ist May to 31st
August, return in 45 minutes. From ist September to 30th April,
return in 30 minutes.
Quit work. From ist May to 31st August, at 7 o'clock. From
ist September to 19th September, at dark. From 20th September to
19th March, at 7^ o'clock. From 20th March to 30th April, at dark.
Lamps are never lighted on Saturday evenings. The above is
the time which is kept in all the mills in Lowell, with a slight differ-
ence in the machine shop; and it makes the average daily time through-
out the year, of running the mills, to be twelve hours and ten minutes.
There are four days in the year which are observed as holidays,
and on which the mills are never put in motion. These are Fast Day,
Fourth of July,, Thanksgiving Day, and Christmas Day. These
make one day more than is usually devoted to pastime in any other
place in New England. The following table shows the average hours
of work per day, throughout the year, in the Lowell Mills.
' Documentary History of American Fftdustrial Society. Edited l)>' John R.
Commons and others (Cleveland, iqio), VIII. 141-2. Printed by permission of
the |)uhlishers, The Arthur II. Clark Comfwny.
POPULATION AND LABOR 535
Hrs. Min. Hrs. Min.
January 11 24 July 12 45
February 12 . . August 12 45
March 11 52 September 12 23
April 13 31 October 12 10
May 12 45 November 11 56
June 12 45 December 11 24
E. An Unfriendly View, 1846 ^
Despite the superiority of the American operatives and the relatively high wages
received by them, there were agitators who professed to believe that factory con-
ditions in the United States were far worse than they really were. The following
criticism of the conditions at Lowell was published in 1846:
We have lately visited the cities of Lowell and Manchester,
and have had an opportunity of examining the factory system more
closely than before. We had distrusted the accounts, which we
had heard from persons engaged in the Labor Reform, now beginning
to agitate New England; we could scarcely credit the statements
made in relation to the exhausting nature of the labor in the mills,
and to the manner in which the young women, the operatives, lived
in their boarding-houses, six sleeping in a room, poorly ventilated.
We went through many of the mills, talked particularly to a large
number of the operatives, and ate at their boarding-house, on pur-
pose to ascertain by personal inspection the facts of the case. We
assure our readers that very little information is possessed, and no
correct judgments formed, by the public at large, of our factory
system, which is the first germ of the Industrial or Commercial Feudal-
ism, that is to spread over our land. . . .
In Lowell live between seven and eight thousand young women,
who are generally daughters of farmers of the different States of
New England; some of them are members of families that were
rich the generation before. . . .
The operatives work thirteen hours a day in the summer time,
and from daylight to dark in the winter. At half past four in the
morning the factory bell rings, and at five the girls must be in the
mills. A clerk, placed as a watch, observes those who are a few
minutes behind the time, and effectual means are taken to stimulate
to punctuality. This is the morning comniencement of the indus-
^ Documentary History of American Industrial Society. Edited by John R.
Commons and others (Cleveland, 1910), VII, 132-5. Printed by permission of
the publishers, The Arthur H. Clark Company.
536 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
trial discipline — (should we not rather say industrial tyranny?)
which is established in these Associations of this moral and Christian
community. At seven the girls are allowed thirty minutes for break-
fast, and at noon thirty minutes more for dinner, except during the
first quarter of the year, when the time is extended to forty-five min-
utes. But within this time they must hurry to their boarding-houses
and return to the factory, and that through the hot sun, or the rain
and cold. A meal eaten under such circumstances must be quite
unfavorable to digestion and health, as any medical man will inform
us. At seven o'clock in the evening the factory bell sounds the close
of the day's work.
Thus thirteen hours per day of close attention and monotonous
labor are exacted from the young women in these manufactories.
... So fatigued — we should say, exhausted and worn out, but
we wish to speak of the system in the simplest language — are num-
bers of the girls, that they go to bed soon after their evening meal,
and endeavor by a comparatively long sleep to resuscitate their
weakened frames for the toils of the coming days. When Capital
has got thirteen hours of labor daily out of a being, it can get nothing
more. It would be a poor speculation in an industrial point of view
to own the operative; for the trouble and expense of providing for
times of sickness and old age would more than counterbalance the
difference between the price of wages and the expense of board and
clothing. The far greater number of fortunes, accumulated by the
North in comparison with the South, shows that hireUng labor is
more profitable for Capital than slave labor.
Now let us examine the nature of the labor itself, and the condi-
tions under which it is performed. Enter with us into the large rooms,
when the looms are at work. The largest that we saw is in the
Amoskeag Mills at Manchester. It is four hundred feet long, and
about seventy broad; there are five hundred looms, and twenty-one
thousand spindles in it. The din and clatter of these five hundred
looms under full operation, struck us on first entering as something
frightful and infernal, for it seemed such an atrocious violation of one
of the faculties of the human soul, the sense of hearing. After a
while we became somewhat inured to it, and by speaking quite close <
to the ear of an operative and quite loud, we could hold a conversa-
tion, and make the inquiries we wished.
The girls attend upon an average three looms; many attend four,j
but this requires a very active person, and the most unremitting^
care. However, a great many do it. Attention to two is as much at]
POPULATION AND LABOR 537
should be demanded of an operative. This gives us some idea of
the application required during the thirteen hours of daily labor.
The atmosphere of such a room cannot of course be pure; on the
contrary it is charged with cotton filaments and dust, which, we were
told, are very injurious to the lungs. On entering the room, although
the day was warm, we remarked that the windows were down; we
asked the reason, and a young woman answered very naively, and
without seeming to be in the least aware that this privation of fresh
air was anything else than perfectly natural, that "when the wind
blew, the threads did not work so well." After we had been in the
room for fifteen or twenty minutes, we found ourselves, as did the
persons who accompanied us, in quite a perspiration, produced by
a certain moisture which we observed in the air, as well as by the
heat. . . .
The young women sleep upon an average six in a room; three
beds to a room. There is no privacy, no retirement here; it is almost
impossible to read or write alone, as the parlor is full and so many
sleep in the same chamber. A young woman remarked to us, that
if she had a letter to write, she did it on the head of a band-box, sitting
on a trunk, as there was not space for a table. So live and toil the
young women of our country in the boarding-houses and manufac-
tories, which the rich and influential of our land have built for them.
IV. Experiments in Communism
A. The Rappites, 1840 ^
During the period 1808- 1860 many experiments in communism were made
in the United States. Of the best known of these experiments one was carried out
by the Rappites at Economy, Pennsylvania, another by the Owenites at New Har-
mony, Indiana, and yet others by the followers of Fourier in various parts of the
country. An English traveler gives an account of his visit among the Rappites
as follows:
The settlement of Economy embraces at present a tract of
about 4,000 acres of rich land, on the northern bank of the river
Ohio, in the State of Pennsylvania, from 16 to 20 miles below Pitts-
burgh — the land alone being worth, at 20 dollars an acre, 80,000
dollars, and the dwellings, stores, and larger buildings, 80,000 dollars
more — while the stock of grain and cattle, materials of manufacture,
machinery, and implements, is thought to be worth 160,000 dollars;
* The Eastern and Western States of America. By J. S. Buckingham (London,
[1842]), II, 212-3, 216-20.
538' READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
^B
in addition to which, they have in cash, bank-stock, and other
scriptions of securities, nearly 200,000 dollars; so as to make
whole property amount to about 500,000 dollars — or ioo,ooo£
sterling, for a community of about 500 persons, equivalent to 1000
dollars each.
The plan of the town is symmetrical; the streets, about 80 feet
in breadth, crossing each other at right angles, and lined on each side
with trees, but not paved, either at the sides or centre, as there is no
thoroughfare of vehicles or passengers in sufficient numbers to render
this necessary. The dwelling-houses, of which there are about 100,
are small — of two stories chiefly; many of brick, and others of wood
— most of them standing separately, and having a large portion of
garden-ground attached to them, which is very neatly cultivated. . . .
The property being held in common, no individual lays claim to
anything as his own; and as nothing is either bought or sold among
themselves, money is of course unnecessary. Stores of various de-
scriptions exist, for the several articles in daily consumption — such
as provisions of all kinds, clothing, furniture, &c., all of a simple,
but wholesome and substantial kind; and each of these stores is placed
under the superintendence of a competent individual. At stated
periods in the day or week, the caterer for each family goes to the
store, and procures such articles as may be required, and there is no
limitation to the quantity to be supplied. Experience soon estab-
lishes a sort of standard of probable sufficiency, and this is generally
found to be adequate to the regular consumption, beyond which
there is no temptation either to hoard or waste. As there is always
enough for every one, there is no apprehension of scarcity; and as
the habit of care and economy is established both by precept and
example, waste would be deemed sinful, and is never practised. It
is the same with clothes as with provisions. Only certain articles
of apparel, all substantial and good, but simple in colour and form,
are made for males and females, from materials woven, and labour
supplied, in the place; and whenever any of these garments are re-
quired, application to the store is sufficient to obtain them, ''without
money, and without price."
Persons being thus assured of a full and sufficient supply of good
food, good clothing, comfortable shelter, and an equal share of what-
ever social privileges, or accumulations of property within the com-
munity, may be the fruits of this system,— cheerfully give their
labour as an equivalent for this; especially as that labour is healthy,
light, and in no rc-spect degrading. The men work about ten hours a
POPULATION AND LABOR
539
day; having breakfast at half -past six — dinner at half -past eleven —
and supper at half-past five. The females working in the cotton-
factory have only eight hours' labour; and in the dwellings still less,
for at nine in the evening every one retires, and they have several
hours of leisure in the day. . . .
To them, it is matter of the utmost indifference, whether the
Banks suspend payment or redeem their notes in specie — whether
trade is flourishing or otherwise — whether bankrupts are many or
few — and whether the Whigs or the Democrats prevail. They go
on tilling their fields, and reaping their harvest; feeding their sheep,
and shearing their wool; growing their fruits, and gathering them
in — let the times be what they may. All the materials produced
by them are first stored in sufficient quantity for the consumption
of their own community, and the rest they send to market. The
only things they require to buy, are cotton for their manufactures,
and colonial produce for their household supplies; neither of which
their soil or climate will admit of their growing. Their own wool
and their own silk they work up into cloth, velvets, silks, and satins.
Of these also they sell the surplus above what they themselves con-
sume. To avoid all risks, they sell at small profit for ready money;
and they purchase their raw cotton, their coffee, tea, sugar, &c., with
ready money also, at reduced rates. And as, in every year's trans-
actions, there is a considerable gain to the community — since they
always produce much more than they can consume — the excess of
gain is expended in the purchase of new land, the erection of new
buildings, and the procuring of new stock; or it is otherwise invested
in some secure manner, so as to ensure the safety of both principal
and interest.
B. The Owenites at New Harmony, i8jo ^
The experiment at New Harmony was short lived, and many reasons have been
advanced to account for the failure of the experunent. An account of the failure,
by an apparently unbiased observer, is as follows:
New Harmony is seated on the banks of the Wabash; and follow-
ing the sinuosities of that river, it is distant sixty-four or five miles
from the Ohio, but over land, not more than seventeen. This settle-
ment was purchased by Messrs. MacClure and Owen from Mr. Rapp,
in the year 1823. The Rappites had been in possession of the place
for six years, during which they had erected several large brick build-
^ A Ramble of Six Thousand Miles Through the United States of America. By
S. A. Ferrall (London, 1832), 92-3, 97-9.
S40 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
ings of a public nature, and sundry smaller ones as residences, and
had cultivated a considerable quantity of land in the immediate
vicinity of the town. Mr. Owen intended to have established here
a community of union and mutual co-operation; but, from a too
great confidence in the power of the system which he advocates, to
reform character, he has been necessitated to abandon that design
at present. . . .
Whilst at Harmony, I collected some information relative to the
failure of the community, and I shall here give a slight sketch of the
result of my inquiries. I must observe that so many, and such con-
flicting statements, respecting public measures, I beUeve never were
before made by a body of persons dwelling within limits so confined
as those of Harmony. Some of the ci-devant ''communicants" call
Robert Owen a fool, whilst others brand him with still more oppro-
brious epithets: and I never could get two of them to agree as to the
primary causes of the failure of that community.
The community was composed of a heterogeneous mass, collected
together by public advertisement, which may be divided into three
classes. The first class was composed of a number of well-educated j
persons, who occupied their time in eating and drinking — dressing
and promenading — attending balls, and improving the habits of
society; and they may be termed the aristocracy of this Utopian
republic. The second class were composed of practical co-operators, j
who were well inclined to work, but who had no share, or voice, inj
the management of affairs. The third and last class was a body of]
theoretical philosophers — Stoics, Platonics, Pythagoreans, Epicu^
reans, Peripatetics, and Cynics, who amused themselves in strikU
out plans — exposing the errors of those in operation — caricaturi
— and turning the whole proceedings into ridicule.
The second class, disliking the species of co-operation afTord<
them by the first class, naturally became dissatisfied with their im
tivity — and the third class laughed at them both. Matters we
in this state for some time, until Mr. Owen found the funds we
completely exhausted. He then stated that the community shoi
divide; and that he would furnish land, and all necessary materia
for operations, to such of them as wished to form a community apj
from the original establishment. This intimation was enough.
first class, with few exceptions, retired, followed by part of both
others, and all exclaiming against Mr. Owen's conduct. A pei
named Taylor, who had entered into a distillery speculation with
of Mr. Owen's sons, seized this opportunity to get the control cl
POPULATION AND LABOR 541
part of the property. Mr. Owen became embarrassed. Harmony
was on the point of being sold by the sheriff — discord prevailed,
and co-operation ceased.
C. Description of a Phalanx, 184Q ^
In various parts of the United States coxnmunistic groups called phalanxes
were organized. A description of one of these phalanxes by a friend and supporter
follows:
The Wisconsin Phalanx was incorporated February, 1845. The
original members were chiefly from Southport, Wisconsin; they
possessed no experience in associative life, and had derived their
ideas of the theory of Association, principally from the pamphlets
and newspaper writings of the school of Fourier. By a clause in the
charter of the Phalanx, the increase in the annual appraisal of all
the property, real and personal of the Phalanx, exceeding the cost,
was to be yearly divided or credited one fourth to stock, and the
remaining three fourths to labor, in such manner as the by-laws should
provide.
The Domain of the Phalanx contains about one thousand, eight
hundred acres of prime land, prairie, oak-openings, groves and
meadows, in Ceresco township and vicinity, Fond-du-lac County.
This region of country, is not exceeded by any part of the whole
State, for beauty of scenery, healthfulness of situation, and fertility
of soil. No ague of local origin, has ever been known here, and not
one adult male member of the Society, since the institution of the
Phalanx, has deceased. Five women have died on the Domain,
during the entire existence of the Society; but before their coming
to Ceresco, they were all afflicted with the diseases, which proved
fatal to them. Several infants and small children, have died from
complaints incidental to that period of life; the cause, no doubt,
would be found in a want of correct knowledge and physiological
treatment in regard to infants and young children; a lack of
knowledge certainly not greater here than elsewhere. We are con-
fident that no region in the whole Northwest, can be found more
remarkable for continued good health, than Ceresco, and the ad-
jacent country.
There is a good water power on the Domain, the property of the
Phalanx; and we have in operation a Grist Mill and a Saw Mill, the
1 Documentary History of American Industrial Society. Edited by John R.
Commons and others (Cleveland, 1910), VII, 264-6. Printed by permission of
the publishers, The Arthur H. Clark Company.
542 READLNG^ IN ECONOMIC HiisTORY
former of which is kept constantly employed. A new and commodious
building, intended for a Protective Union Store, has been erected at
the private cost of some of the members, and is nearly sufhcientK
completed for the commencement of business. There is a good stone
school house; a blacksmith shop with three fires in full employment;
and buildings for the dwelling of members, one a long new frame
house, conveniently and pleasantly arranged, several of the rooms of
which are now completed and occupied, and all might be finish >
within a short time, and at no great expense. Another row of frai
houses, not so convenient nor strong in construction, as that ju
referred to, was put up at the first founding of the Society; and in
this latter range of buildings, the greater part of the members yet
reside. There is also another row of frame buildings, with a cupola
and a bell, a kitchen, a bakery, a large dining room and apartments
serving for the accommodation of strangers and travelers. In addi-
tion, there is a substantial stone dwelling, sufficiently large for two
families, living on the principles of Associative life. The most of
these buildings have been constructed with a view to a unitary mode
of life; they were designed for temporary use in a transitional
state of society and would principally be serviceable for the accommo-
dation of a combined or friendly company, until more suitable and
comfortable dwellings were erected. They would contain altogether
about thirty-five families, with the usual average number of persons
to a family.
V. Character of the People — North and South
The Views of an Englishman with Southern Tendencies, i860 ^
Although the people of different sections of the country develop)ed the same
general characteristics, those of the people of the northern states differed in detafl
from those of the people of the south. An Englishman with Southern tendencies
has drawn for us the following picture of the people of the different sections:
[character of the northern people]
The greatest distinction between the Northern and Southern
States of the Union was the tendency of the population of the former
to the towns and cities, from the meagreness and unattractivenesB
of life in the country. And yet it is a beautiful country in many
parts — in most parts of New England. Generally speaking, thr
North, as to healthfulness and scenery, has considerably the advan-
» Ten Years in the United States. By D. W. Mitchell (London, 1862), 192-6.
i
POPULATION AND LABOR
543
tage; and yet the natives don't seem to enjoy rural life; they neither
talk nor look as if they did; and those are considered, and consider
themselves, fortunate, who abandon it to go and push their fortunes
in town. The training of the young, and the notions instilled into
them, partly account for this. The quietness and slow profits of
farming are not very tempting to a youth who has been brought up
to believe that he is as good as anybody else, and that there is no
reason why he should not be a millionaire or a President, if he only
struggles hard enough; a very unhealthy and irrational, though very
popular mode of exciting youth to improve themselves — seeing that
there is only room for a very few at the top of the tree.
Arrived in town, the young American looks out for something
light and genteel, abandoning hard and dirty work to foreigners.
While the West has been calling for labourers, workmen, and agri-
culturists of all grades, there have been large numbers of superfluous
young men hanging about in the large eastern cities, competing for
poorly paid employment, principally as "clerks," as shopmen are
called.
The universality of education — of ability to read, and write,
and figure a little — accounts partly for this tendency. A youth who
has been to school, and who has read of the successful struggles of
genius with poverty, feels that he is lowering himself, and throwing
away his chances of rising in society, by submitting to hard, long-
continued physical labour; especially in a climate like that of the
Northern States, where the summer heat and winter cold are so
exhausting to the system, that after the ordinary ten hours' work,
and the time spent in rest and meals, and getting to and from the
place of business, the workman has neither leisure nor inclination for
intellectual culture by study of any kind. Climate has not yet had
time to tell on the population of the United States in general, recruited
as it has incessantly been by immigrants from Europe; but by analyz-
ing the population, and observing that portion of it which has been
longest and most exposed to the dry land-air, the hot summers, and
long, cold winters, and great and sudden meteorological changes of the
North, we may see some of the combined effects of the climate and
his mode of life and general circumstances on the man of the United
States. That portion is the farming population, of Yankee descent.
The type of this class is a rather tall, bony, sinewy, strong man,
with very little fat; with none of the English ruddiness of complexion;
with a good, full, well-formed head, and a brain above the English
average; active, persevering, and full of energy — not a lazy bone
544 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
in his body; well marked, intelligent, decided features, highly «
pressive of a cautious, secretive, determined character; by no means
a handsome man, but frequently fme-looking in youth. There is I
too often about him a look of being overworked both in mind a*
body, and a want of ease, content, and cheerfulness. His mind _
always at work, engaged seriously on something useful or profitable;
and he wears himself out with unceasing anxious thought about gain-
ing and saving: not avariciously, but to provide for the future, and
to raise himself and his family in the social scale. The most serious
faults in his character are too much thought of his own personal
independence and dignity, too much jealousy of any superiority, and
an unduly excited pride and ambition; to which he sacrifices that
little occasional indulgence in careless, hearty, social enjoyment,
which is necessary to health of mind and body.
This is, I think, a fair description of the predominant race in the
eastern and northern States, and in many parts of the west. The
Irish, indeed, interfere seriously with its supremacy, and lately, to a
still greater extent, the Germans; but till within the last ten years,
this Yankee race gave the tone and character to the legislation of
the free-labour States.
[character of the southern people]
The typical Southern man is in many respects, though it will hardly
be expected, more British and European in habits, appearance, and
character. He has plenty on his mind, but he is not so uneasy about
his social position, and allows himself rnore pleasure and social enjoy-
ment — often too much; hence, at forty and fiflyTlie is well enough
off for flesh and fat, but not to excess. What in Europe would be
called a fat person is a great rarity in America, and is seldom to be
met with, except among the Germans, Englishmen, negroes, and
negresses: these last especially; for while among the native-bom
whites there is a strong tendency to dyspepsia, the blacks seem
constitutionally inclined to hyperpepsia.
The preference for rural life, and the love of quiet social inter-
course and enjoyment, mainly distinguish the South from the North;
in the latter section the want of domestic unostentatious sociablen
has been much dwelt upon at times by the press; but excessive devo-
tion to money-making and getting on in the world seems to have
become an incurable habit. There are four national holidays -^
New Year's Day, 4th of July, Thanksgiving Day and Christ
Day, — though, in fact, Christnris is little noticed in t]i<' Vnttli w
POPULATION AND LABOR 545
New Year's Day is not much kept at the South. In an article on
this subject, headed, "Are we a happy people?" in a widely-read
periodical, it was asked, ''How can we get rid of the Fourth HoHday? "
it being regarded as an inconvenient interruption : in towns, at least.
And one-third of the people of the United States live in towns and
cities: in the North, it must be nearly one-half; and in the South a
large portion of the few town people live nearly half the year on their
property in the country.
VI. Po:pulation
Distribution in i860 ^
The census of i860 showed several important facts regarding the growth of
population during the previous decade and its distribution in i860. The largest ■
growth had been in the west and southwest, while in one state, Vermont, the
increase in population had been less than one per cent. The center of population,
however, was in the east, but moving steadily westward.
Though the number of States has increased during the last decen-
nial period from thirty-one to thirty-four, and five new Territories
have been organized, the United States has received no accessions
of territory within that term, except a narrow strip to the southward
of the Colorado river, along the Mexican line, not yet inhabited.
As general good health prevailed, and peace reigned throughout the
country, there was no apparent cause of disturbance or interruption
to the natural progress of population. It is true that the very large
immigration from Europe, together with an influx of considerable
magnitude from Asia to California, has added largely to the augmen-
tation which the returns show to have taken place during the decade.
In comparing the gain of any class of the population, or of the
whole of it, one decade with another, the rate per cent, is not a full
test of advancement. The rate of gain necessarily diminishes with
the density of population, while the absolute increase continues un-
abated. The actual increase of the entire free and slave population
from 1850 to i860, omitting the Indian tribes, was 8,225,464, and the
rate per cent, is set down at 35.46; while from 1840 to 1850 the posi-
tive increment of all classes was 6,122,423, yet the ratio of gain was
35.87 per cent. The two decades from 1800 to 18 10, and from 1840
to 1850, were marked by the great historical facts of the annexation
of Louisiana, and the acquisition of Texas, New Mexico, and Cali-
^ Preliminary Report on the Eighth Census, i860 (Washington, 1862), 3-8.
546 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
fornia. Each of these regions contributed considerably to the popu-
lation of the country, and we accordingly find that during those terms
there was a ratio of increase in the whole body of the people greater
by a small fraction than shown by the table annexed for the decade
preceding the Eighth Census. The preponderance of gain, however,
for that decennial term above all the others since 1790, is signally
large. No more striking evidence can be given of the rapid advance-
ment of our country in the first element of national progress than
that the increase of its inhabitants during the last ten years is greater
by more than 1,000,000 of souls than the whole population in 18 10,
and nearly as great as the entire number of people in 1820. That
the whole of this gain is not from natural increase, but is, in part, de-
rived from the influx of foreigners seeking here homes for themselves
and their children, is a fact which may justly enhance rather than
detract from the satisfaction wherewith we should regard this aug-
mentation of our numbers.
Thus far in our history no State has declined in population. Ver-
mont has remained nearly stationary, and is saved from a positive loss
of inhabitants by only one-third of one per cent. New Hampshire,
likewise, has gained but slowly, her increment being only 8,097, or
two and one-half per cent, on that of 1850. Maine has made the
satisfactory increase of 45,110, or 7.74 per cent. The old agricultural
States may be said to be filled up, so far as regards the resources
adapted to a rural population in the present condition of agricultural
science. The conditions of their increase undergo a change upon the
general occupation and allotment of their areas. Manufactures and
commerce, then, come in to supply the means of subsistence to an
excess of inhabitants beyond what the ordinary cultivation of the
soil can sustain. This point in the progress of population has been
reached, and, perhaps, passed in most, if not all, of the New England
States. But while statistical science may demonstrate within narrow
limits the number of persons who may extract a subsistence from each
square mile of arable land, it cannot compute with any reasonable
approach to certainty the additional population, resident on the
same soil, which may obtain its living by the thousand branches of
artificial industry which the demands of society and civilization have
created. This is forcibly illustrated by the returns relative to the
three other New England States — Massachusetts, Rhode Island,
and Connecticut — which contain 13,780 square miles. The follow-
ing table shows their population in 1850 and i860, and its density
at each period.
POPULATION AND LABOR
547
States
1850
i860
Population
Number of
inhabitants
to the
square mile
Population
Number of
inhabitants
to the
square mile
Massachusetts .
994,514
370,792
147,545
127.49
79-33
112.97
1,231,066
460,147
174,620
157.83
98.42
133-63
Connecticut
Rhode Island
1,412,851
1,865,833
The aggregate territorial extent of Maine, New Hampshire, and
Vermont, is 48,336 square miles; the number of their inhabitants
1,269,450, or 26.26 to the square mile. The stated point of density
was passed by the three States named in the table more than fifty
years ago, and yet they go on increasing in population with a rapidity
as great as at any former period of their history. .
South Carolina has gained during the decade 35,201 inhabitants
of all conditions, equal to 5.27 per cent. Of this increase 16,825 are
whites, and the remainder free colored and slaves. It is perhaps
a Httle remarkable that the relative increase of the free colored class
in this State was more considerable than that of any other. As
their number, 9914, is so small as to excite neither apprehension or
jealousy among the white race, the increase is probably due both to
manumission and natural causes. This State has made slower prog-
ress during the last term than any other in the south, having ad-
vanced only from 27.28 to 28.72 inhabitants to the square mile.
I Tennessee, it will be observed, has made but the moderate gain
' of 10.68 per cent, for all classes. Of this aggregate increase the whites
have gained at the rate of 9.24 per cent, upon 1850, the free colored
13.67, and slaves 15.14.
The next lowest in the rate of increase in the list of southern
States is Virginia, whose gain upon her aggregate population, in
1850, was 174,657, equal to 12.29 per cent. The white class gained
152,611, or 17.06 per cent., the slaves 18,337, or 3.88 per cent.
These are examples of the States wherein the population has
advanced with slowest progress the past ten years. Turning now
to the States which have made the most rapid advance, we find that
New York has increased from 3,097,394 to 3,880,735, exhibiting an
548 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
augmentation of 783,341 inhabitants, being at the rate of 25.29 per
cent. The free colored population has fallen off 64 since 1850, a di-
minution to be accounted for probably by the operation of the fugitive
slave law, which induced many colored persons to migrate further
north.
The gain of Pennsylvania has been in round numbers 595,000.
In that State the free colored have increased about 3,000. The gre;
mildness of the climate and a milder type of the prejudices t
nected with this class of population, the result of benevolent influ-
ences and its proximity to the slaveholding States, may account for
the fact that this race holds its own in Pennsylvania, while undergoing
a diminution in the State next adjoining on the north.
Minnesota was chiefly unsettled territory at the date of the Seventh
Census; its large present population, as shown by the returns, is
therefore nearly clear gam.
The vast region of Texas ten years since was comparatively
wilderness. It has now a population of over 600,000, and the rate oi
its increase is given as 184 per cent.
Illinois presents the most wonderful example of great, continuous.,
and healthful increase. In 1830 Illinois contained 157,445 inhabit-
ants; in 1840, 476,183; in 1850, 851,470; in i860, 1,711,951. The
gain during the last decade was, therefore, 860,481, or 101.06 pei
cent. So large a population, more than doubling itself in ten years
by the regular course of settlement and natural increase, is withou'
a parallel. The condition to which Illinois has attained under tht
progress of the last thirty years is a monument of the blessings o
industry, enterprise, peace, and free institutions.
The growth of Indiana in population, though less extraordinary
than that of her neighboring State, has been most satisfactory, he
gain during the decade having been 362,000, or more than thirty
six per cent, upon her number in 1850.
Michigan, Wisconsin, and Iowa have participated to the full ex
tent in the surprising development of the northwest. The remark
able healthfulness of the climate of that region seems to more thai
compensate for its rigors, and the fertility of the new soil leads me
eagerly to contend with and overcome the harshness of the element
The energies thus called into action have, in a few years, made th
States of the northwest the granary of Europe, and that section
our Union which, within the recollection of living men, was a wildeme
is now the chief source of supply in seasons of scarcity for the sufferin
millions of another continent.
POPULATION AND LABOR 549
Looking cursorily over the returns, it appears that the fifteen
slaveholding States contain 12,240,000 inhabitants, of whom 8,039,000
are whites, 251,000 free colored persons, and 3,950,000 are slaves.
The actual gain of the whole population in those States from 1850
to i860, was 2,627,000, equal to 27.33 per cent. The slaves advanced
in numbers 749,931, or 23.44 per cent. This does not include the
slaves of the District of Columbia, who decreased 502 in the course
of the ten years. The nineteen free States and seven Territories,
together with the federal District, contained, according to the Eighth
Census, 19,201,546 persons, including 27,749 Indians; of whom
18,936,579 were white, and 237,218 free colored. The increase of
both classes was 5,598,603, or 41.24 per cent. No more satisfactory
indication of the advancing prosperity of the country could be de-
sired than this general and remarkable progress in population. North
and south we find instances of unprecedented gains, as in the case of
Illinois, just adverted to. In the southwest the great Statfe of Mis-
souri has increased by the number of 500,000 inhabitants, which is
within a fraction of 74 per cent. It is due to candor to state that the
marked disproportion between the rate of gain in the north and south
respectively, is manifestly to some extent caused by the larger num-
ber of immigrants who settle in the former section, on account of
congeniality of climate, the variety of occupation, the dignity where-
with respectable employment is invested, and the freedom of labor.
Having thus briefly and imperfectly noticed the manner in which
the general gain of population during the last ten years has been
distributed among the States, we may with advantage examine the
progress of the country as a whole, in this respect, from 1790 to i860
. . . [There has been] considerable uniformity in the rate of pro-
gression of the whole population. It has varied in the different de-
cades from 323^(5- per cent, increase to 36^. The whites, constituting
the great bulk of the inhabitants, have governed the ratio of augmenta-
tion for the mass. The lowest rate of increase shown for that class was
by the census of 1830, namely, a fraction less than 34 per cent. In
1850 it has risen above 38 per cent., and continued to be about the
same from 1850 to i860. The number of free colored persons was
small in 1790, and as a condition or class in society it holds about the
same position as then. We possess very insufficient means for esti-
mating the natural increase of this division of our population. Their
aggregate number has been so continually affected by manumissions,
by legislation changing their condition, and to a small extent by emi-
gration, that from these causes, rather than by the ordinary progress
550
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
of increase, they have reached a total of nearly half a million, and the
rate per cent, of their advancement in seventy years, has been equal
to that of the whole population, and not very far below that of the
whites; and that at the same time they have gained in a ratio nearly
one-half greater than the slaves. . . .
[.Aggregate Population and Number of Inhabitants to the Square Mile']
States
New England States (6)
Middle States, including Mary-
land, Delaware, and Ohio (6). .
Coast planting States, including
South Carolina, Georgia,
Florida, Alabama, Mississippi,
and Louisiana (6)
Central slave States, Virginia,
North Carolina, Tennessee,
Kentucky, Missouri, and Ark-
ansas (6)
Northwestern States, Indiana,
Illinois, Michigan, Wisconsin,
Iowa, Minnesota (6)
Texas
California
Area in
square
miles
62,116
151,760
286,077
309,210
337,957
237,321
188,982
1850.
Popula-
tion
2,728,106
8,553,713
3^557,872
5,167,276
2,734,945
212,592
165,000
No. of
inhabit-
ants to
square
mile
43-92
56.36
12.43
16.71
8.90
0.89
0.87
i860.
Popula-
tion
3,135,283
10,597,661
4,364,927
6,471,887
5,436,176
604,215
379,994
No. of
inhabit-
ants to
square
mile
50.47
69.83
15-25
20.93
16.08
2-5S
VII. Immigration
Extent and Character^ 1820-1860 *
The immigration question was of considerable importance even before
Civil War. There can be no doubt that the immigrants affected .\merican life
and they in turn were affected by American ideals and ideas. The extent
character of the immigration up to the year i860 are given by the census authoriti
as follows:
One of the commissioners sent by the Continental Congress tc|
Europe, Silas Deane, expressed the expectation that if the colonic
established their independence, the immigration from the Old Worl
* Preliminary Report on the Eighth Census, i860 (Washington, 1862), 12-19.
POPULATION AND LABOR 551
would be prodigiously increased; and as a consequence, the cultivated
lands would rise in value, and new lands would be brought into market.
This anticipation has been strikingly and abundantly realized. And
in connexion with the census of nativities, the records of immigration
have a special importance as indicating the progressive augmentation
of the immigrants who have sought to improve their fortunes in the
New World.
From a survey of the irregular data previous to 181 9, by Dr.
Seybert, Prof. Tucker, and other statists, it appears that from 1790
to 1800, about 50,000 Europeans, or "aliens," arrived in this country;
in the next ten years the foreign arrivals were about 70,000, and
in the ten years following, 114,000, ending with 1820. To de-
termine the actual settlers, a deduction of 14.5 per cent, from these
numbers should probably be made for transient passengers, as here-
after described.
Louisiana was purchased from France in 1803. The portion of
this territory south of the thirty-third parallel, according to the his-
torian Hildreth, comprised a population of about 50,000, more than
half of whom were slaves. With these should be counted about
10,000 in the settlements north of that parallel, augmented by a recent
immigration, with a predominance of whites. The foreign population
acquired with the whole Louisiana territory may thus be reckoned
at 60,000; about one-half or 30,000 being whites of French, Spanish,
and British extraction; and the other 30,000 being slaves and free
colored. This number of whites should evidently be added to the
current immigration by sea already mentioned, in order to obtain the
foreign accession to the white population of the United States during
that period.
Instead of scattered notices from shipping lists, the arrival of
passengers has been officially recorded at the custom-houses, since
18 1 9, by act of Congress. There are some deficiencies perhaps in
the returns of the first ten or twelve years, but the subsequent reports
are considered reliable. While the classified lists exhibit the whole
number of foreign passengers, the great majority of whom are emi-
grants, they also furnish valuable information not otherwise obtain-
able respecting the statistical history of immigration.
The following numbers, registered under the act of 1819, are
copied from the authentic summary of Bromwell, to which the num-
bers for the last five years have been added from the annual reports of
the State Department, thus bringing the continuation down to the
year of the present census.
552
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
SiaUment of the number of Alien passengers arriving in the United States by sea from
foreign countries from September jo, i8ig, to December ji, i860.
Year
Males
Females
Sex not
stated
Year ending September 30, 1820
1821
1822
1823
1824
1825
1826
1827
1828
1829
1830
1831
1832
Quarter ending December 31, 1832
Year ending December 31, 1833
1834
183s
1836
1837
1838
1839
1840
1841
1842
First three quarters of 1843
Year ending September 30, 1844
184s
1846
1847
1848
1849
1850
Quarter ending December 31, 1 850
Year ending December 31, 1851
1852
1853
1854
1855
1856
i8S7
1858
1859
i860
Toul
4,871
4,651
3,816
3,598
4,706
6,917
7,702
11,803
17,261
11,303
6,439
14,909
34,596
4,691
41,546
38,796
28,196
47,865
48,837
23,474
42,932
52,883
48,082
62,277
30,069
44,431
65,015
87,777
136,086
133,906
177,232
196,331
32,990
217,181
212,469
207,958
256,177
115,307
115,846
146,215
72,824
69,161
88,477
2,393
1,636
1,013
848
1,393
2,959
3,078
5,939
10,060
5,112
3,135
7,724
18,583
2,512
17,094
22,540
17,027
27,553
27,653
13,685
25,125
31,132
32,031
41,907
22,424
34,184
48.115
65,742
97,917
92,149
119,280
112,635
26,805
162,219
157,696
160,615
171,656
85,567
84,590
105,091
50,002
51.640
65,077
1,121
2,840
2,082
1,908
1,813
323
57
1,133
61
6,105
13,748
100
4,029
151
824
2,850
1,755
12
51
176
381
3
1,241
897
965
472
512
1,038
181
66
1.438
72
300
481
86
2.977.603
^035.536
49.275
POPULATION AND LABOR
553
The following aggregates also exhibit the number of arrivals of
passengers from foreign countries during periods of nearly ten years
each, and thus indicate* the accelerated progress of immigration:
Periods
Passengers of
Foreign birth
American
and Foreign
In the lo j'^ears ending September 30, 1829.
128,502
538,381
1,427,337
2,968,194
151,636
572,716
1,479,478
3,255,591
In the loj years ending December 31, 1839
In the Q'l years ending September 30, 1849.
In the iij years ending December 31, i860
In the 41 J years ending December 31, i860
5,062,414
5,459,421
Adjusting the returns to the periods of the decennial census,
by the aid of the quarterly reports, we find very nearly the follow-
ing numbers:
Three census periods
Passengers of
Foreign birth
In the 10 years previous to June
Do..'. do
Do do
1840
1850
i860
552,000
1,558,300
2,707,624
To arrive at the true immigration, these numbers should be largely
increased for those who have come by way of Canada. On the other
hand, they should be diminished for return emigrants, and for the
merchants, factors, and visitors who go and come repeatedly, and are
thus enumerated twice or more in the returns.
For an example of the former class, according to British registry,
17,798 emigrants returned from the United States to Great Britain
in the year i860. How numerous has been the latter class who have
been counted twice or more, is not definitely known; to make note
of these would constitute a desirable improvement in the future
official reports.
The preceding summaries embrace passengers of foreign birth,
together with 397,007 native born Americans, who were also regis-
tered as arriving from foreign ports. In the record of ages following,
both classes are united; but since the foreigners are far more numer-
ous, the result will exhibit very nearly the relative number at each
554
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
age of the foreign passengers. A careful reduction of the whole
number whose ages were specified, has just been completed in con-
nexion with the census, as follows:
Distribution of Ages on arrival.
Ages
Number of ages stated
from 1820 to i860
Proportions
Males
Females
Total
Males
Females
Total
Under 5
5 and under 10
10 and under 15
15 and under 20
20 and under 25
25 and under 30
30 and under 35
35 and under 40
40 and upwards.
218,417
199,704
194,580
404,338
669,853
576,822
352,619
239,468
342,022
200,676
180,606
166,833
349,755
428,974
269,554
163,778
114,165
200,322
419,093
380,310.
361,413
754,093
1,098,827
846,376
516,397
353,633
542,344
4-143
3.788
3.691
7.669
12.706
10.940
6.688
4-542
6.487
3.806
3-425
3.164
6.633
8.136
5-112
3.106
2.165
3-799
7-949
7-213
6.85s
14.302
20.842
16.052
9-794
6.707
10.286
Total
3,197,823
2,074,663
5,272,486
60.654
39-346
100.000
From the foregoing table it will be seen that the distribution is
materially different from that of a settled population; the females
are less than the males in the ratio of two to three; almost precisely
one-half of the total passengers are between fifteen and thirty years
of age. It will further be noted that the sexes approach nearest
to equality in children and the youthful ages, as would naturally
be expected in the migration, of families; while from twenty-five
years of age to forty the male passengers are double the number of
females. . . .
The passengers from foreign ports arrive at all seasons of the year;
the greatest number, however, make the passage in the second and
third quarters, or in the summer months, and a smaller number in
the winter months.
The deaths on the voyage during the last five years have been
only about one-sixth of one per cent.; the time of passage being gen-
erally some thirty days. . . .
From the first of the two following tables it will be seen that the
most numerous class among the passengers is that of laborers; the
next in order arc farmers, mechanics, and merchants. The ''seam-
stresses and milliners," and nearly all of the "servants," are females;
the other female passcninTs. willi (vw exceptions, have been entered
POPULATION AND LABOR 555
under the category of ''not stated," and comprise about five-sevenths
of that division.
It will be proper to mention that the ten trades and professions
marked with a star in the table were always enumerated during the
whole period. The other occupations were not reported during the
four years i856-'59, except that their aggregate only was embraced
under the single title of "other occupations." But the omission
could be roughly supplied by assuming the number in each trade
during the four years to be the same fraction of the yearly passengers
as it was in the other six years.
In 1 856-' 5 9, the deaths on the passage also were omitted in the
official total of passengers, though retained in all previous years and
in i860; for the sake of uniformity this temporary omission of deaths
is restored in the present collection of tables, which have been veri-
fied throughout with the greatest care.
The next following table, stating the birthplace or "country where
born," will form a valuable supplement to the decennial census of
nativities. Excepting the first numeric column, which commenced
with small numbers October i, 1819, the remaining columns corre-
spond as nearly with the census periods as the official yearly reports
allow without interpolation.
The total number arriving from the United Kingdom of Great
Britain and Ireland on our shores is thus stated to be 2,750,874.
But a recent statement from British official sources gives the number
emigrating to the United States in the forty-six years, i8i5-'6o, as
3,048,206. The difference of the two returns will be explained partly
by those who emigrated in the interval, 181 5-1 9, before our registry
commenced, being about 55,000; and chiefly by the more numerous
class who entered the United States by way of Canada, and so were
not included in our custom-house returns.
In the same period of forty-six years it is also stated that 1,196,521
persons emigrated from the United Kingdom to the British colonies
in North America. A large portion of these are known to have
eventually settled in the United States. Thus it appears safe to as-
sume that since the close of the last war with that country, in 18 14,
about three and a quarter millions of the natives of Great Britain and
Ireland, "a population for a kingdom," have emigrated to this country.
Next in magnitude is the migration from Germany, amounting to
1,486,044 by our custom-house returns; the next is that from France,
208,063; 2,nd from the other countries, as shown in the table. A
large share of the German emigrants have embarked from the port
556
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
of Havre; others from Bremen, Hamburg, Antwerp; many have also
crossed over and taken passage from British ports.
As our own people, following " the star of empire," have migrated to
the west in vast numbers, their places have been supplied by Euro-
peans, which has modified the character of the population, yet the
great mass of the immigrants are found to cherish true patriotism
for the land of their adoption.
Occupation of passengers arriving in the United States from foreign countries during
the forty-one years ending with z86o
Occupation
*Merchants
*Farmers
•Mechanics
•Mariners
•Miners
•Laborers
Shoemakers
Tailors
Seamstresses and milli
ners
Actors
Weavers and spinners,
•Clergymen
Clerks
•Law'yers
•Physicians
Engineers
Artists
Teachers
Musicians
Printers
Painters
Masons
Hatters
Manufacturers
MUlers
Butchers.
Bakers. . .
•Servants.
Other occupations . . .
Not sUtcd
Total
1820 to
1830
1831 to
1840
19,434
15,005
6,805
4,995
341
10,280
1,109
983
413
183
2,937
415
882
244
80s
226
139
275
140
179
232
793
137
175
199
329
583
1,327
5,466
101,442
176,473
41,881
88,240
56,582
8,004
368
53,169
1,966
2,252
1,672
87
6,600
932
1,143
461
1,959
3"
513
267
165
472
369
1,435
114
107
189
432
569
2,571
4,004
363,252
640,086
1841 to
1850
46,388
256,880
164,411
6,398
1,735
281,229
63
65
2,096
233
1,303
1,559
1,065
831
2,116
654
1,223
832
236
14
8
24
I
1,833
33
76
28
24,538
2,892
969,411
1.768,175
1851 to
i860
124,149
404,712
179,726
10,087
37,523
527,639
336
334
1,065
85
717
1,420
792
1,140
2,229
825
615
154
188
40
38
58
4
1,005
210
108
92
21,058
13,844
1,544,494
2,874,687
POPULATION AND LABOR
Country where horn
557
Countries
England
Ireland
Scotland
Wales
Great Britain and Ire-
land
Total United Kingdom
France
Spain
Portugal
Belgium
Prussia
Germany
Holland
Denmark
Norway and Sweden. .
Poland
Russia
Turkey
Switzerland
Italy
Greece
Sicily
Sardinia
Corsica.
Malta
Iceland
Europe
British America
South America
Central America
Mexico
West Indies
China
East Indies
Persia
Asia
Liberia
Egypt
Morocco
Algiers
1820 to
1830
15,837
27,106
3,180
170
35,534
81,827
8,868
2,616
180
28
146
7,583
1,127
189
94
21
89
21
3,257
389
20
17
32
2
I
2
2,486
542
107
4,818
3,998
3
9
183 1 to
1840
7,611
29,188
2,667
185
243,540
283,191
45,575
2,125
829
22
4,250
148,204
1,412
1,063
I,2CI
369
277
7
4,821
2,211
49
35
7
5
35
13,624
856
44
6,599
12,301
8
39
I
8
4
4
1841 to
1850
32,092
162,332
3,712
1,261
848,366
,047,763
77,262
2,209
550
5,074
12,149
422,477
8,251
539
13,903
105
551
59
4,644
1,590
16
79
201
2
78
51
41,723
3,579
368
3,271
13,528
35
36
7
4
5
I
2
1851 to
i860
247,125
748,740
38,331
6,319
297,578
,338,093
76,358
9,298
1,^55
4,738
43,887
907,780
10,789
3,749
20,931
1,164
457
83
25,011
7,012
31
429
1,790
5
10
473
59,3o§
1,224
449
3,078
1 0,66c
4T,397
43
15
19
5
1820 to
i860
302,665
967,366
47,890,
7,935
1,425,018
2,750^874
208,063
16,248
2,614
9,862
60,432
1,486,044
21,579
5,540
36,129
1,659
1,374
170
37,733
11,202
116
560
2,030
9
119
10
526
4 117,142
6,201
968
17,766
40,487
41,443
127
22
27
19
4
5
2
558
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
Country where born — Continued
Countries
1820 to
1830
1831 to
1840
1 841 to
1850
1851 to
i860
1820 to
i860
Barbary States
Cape of Good Hope. . . .
Africa
4
2
10
13
271
70
4
I
36
29
6
52
15
6
3
I
2
69,799
47
327
I
3
3
28
3
I
52,725
186
2,873
8
189
7
44
6
104
13
4
25.438
Azores
3--
29
79
7
109
17
3
79
4
180.854
Canary Islands
Madeira Islands
Cape Verd Islands
Sandwich Islands. .....
Society Islands
Australia
St. Helena
2
Isle of France.
South Sea Islands
New Zealand
79
Not stated
32,892
Total Aliens
United States
151,824
24,649
599,125
40,961
1,713,251
54,924
2,598,214
276,473
5,062,414
397,007
Total
176,473
640,086
1,768,175
2,874,687
5,459,421
CHAPTER XVII
SLAVERY AND THE SOUTH, 182^-1860
I. The Economics of Slave Labor
A. A Philosophic View of Slave Labor, i860 ^
Slavery discussions just before the Qjvil War centered largely around the
question of the advantages and disadvantages of slave labor. Those friendly to
the system contended that the employment of negro slaves in the south was not
only necessary but also desirable. Opponents of the system could not deny that
the nature of the southern crops demanded a large supply of permanent, unskilled, •
hand labor, and that the negro slave possessed those characteristics, but they claimed
that the same economic ends couldLbe attained under free competition, among both
whites and blacks. Some writers on the question attempted to be fair in their
examinations, but even they oftentimes appear to be trying to prove points
rather than to discover facts. The large majority, however, was biased, either for
or against slavery, an^each one selected arguments to suit his particular needs.
Of those who attempted to examine the economics of slavery from a purely imper-
sonal viewpoint, the fenglish economist, J. E. Cairnes, was perhaps the best known.
His views were as follows:
A circumstance more influential in determining the history of slav-
ery in America than either origin or climate is pointed at by Tocque-
ville in his remark, that the soil of New England " was entirely opposed
to a territorial aristocracy." ''To bring that refractory land into
cultivation, the constant and interested exertions of the owner him-
self were necessary; and, when the ground was prepared, its produce
was found to be insufficient to enrich a master and a farmer at the
same time. The land was then naturally broken up into small por-
tions which the proprietor cultivated for himself." Such a country,
for reasons which will presently be more fully indicated, was entirely
unsuited to cultivation by slave labour; but what I wish here to re-
mark is, that this fact, important as it is with reference to our subject,
is yet insufficient in itself to afford the solution which we seek; for,
though it would account for the disappearance of slavery from the
New England States, it fails entirely when applied to the country
^ The Slave Power. By J. E. Cairnes (London and Cambridge, 1863), 42-52.
56o READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
west and south of the Hudson, which is for the most part exceedingl\
fertile, but in which, nevertheless, slavery, though extensively intr<
duced, has not been able to maintain itself. To understand, ther\
fore, the conditions on which the success of a slave regime depends,
we must advert to other considerations than any which have yet been
adduced.
The true causes of the phenomenon will appear, if we reflect on
the characteristic advantages and disadvantages which attach respec-
tively to slavery and free labour, as productive instruments, in con-
nexion with the external conditions under which these forms of in-
dustry came into competition in North America.
The economic advantages of slavery are easily stated: they are
all comprised in the fact that the employer of slaves has absolute
power over his workmen, and eHjoys the disposal of the whole fruit
of their labours. Slave labour, therefore, admits of the most com-
plete organization, that is to say, it may be combined on an extensive
scale, and directed by a controlling mind to a single end, and its cost
can never rise above that which is necessary to maintain the slave
in health and strength.
On the other hand, the economical defects of slave labour are very
serious. They may be summed up under the three following heads:
— it is given reluctantly; it is unskilful; it is wanting in versatility.
It is given reluctantly, and consequently the industry of the slave
can only be depended on so long as he is watched. The moment the
master's eye is withdrawn, the slave relaxes his efforts. The cost
of slave labour will therefore, in great measure, depend on the degree
in which the work to be performed admits of the workmen being
employed in close proximity to each other. If the work be such that
a large gang can be employed with efficiency within a small space,
and be thus brought under the eye of a single overseer, the expense
of superintendence will be slight; if, on the other hand, the nature of
the work requires that the workmen should be dispersed over an ex-
tended area, the number of overseers, and therefore, the cost of the
labour which requires this supervision, will be proportionately in-
creased. The cost of slave labour thus varies directly with the degree
in which the work to be done requires dispersion of the labourers, and
inversely as it admits of their concentration. Further, the work being
performed reluctantly, fear is substituted for hope, as the stimulus
to exertion. But fear is ill calculated to draw from a labourer
all the industry of which he is capable. **Fear," says Bentham,
"leads the labourer to hide his powers, rather than to show them;
SLAVERY AND THE SOUTH 561
to remain below, rather than to surpass himself. ... By displaying
superior capacity, the slave would only raise the measure of his
ordinary duties; by a work of supererogation he would only prepare
punishment for himself." He therefore seeks, by concealing his
powers, to reduce to the lowest the standard of requisition. "His
ambition is the reverse of that of the free man; he seeks to descend
in the scale of industry, rather than to ascend."
Secondly, slave labour is unskilful, and this, not only because
the slave, having no interest in his work, has no inducement to exert
his higher faculties, but because, from the ignorance to which he is
of necessity condemned, he is incapable of doing so. In the Slave
States of North America, the education of slaves, even in the most
rudimentary form, is proscribed by law, and consequently their
intelligence is kept uniformly and constantly at the very lowest point.
"You can make a nigger work," said an interlocutor in one of Mr.
Olmsted's dialogues, "but you cannot make him think." He is
therefore unsuited for all branches of industry which require the
slightest care, forethought, or dexterity. He cannot be made to
co-operate with machinery; he can only be trusted with the coarsest
implements; he is incapable of all but the rudest forms of labour.
But further, slave labour is eminently defective in point of versa-
tility. The difficulty of teaching the slave anything is so great, that
the only chance of turning his labour to profit is, when he has once
learned a lesson, to keep him to that lesson for life. Where slaves,
therefore, are employed there can be no variety of production. If
tobacco be cultivated, tobacco becomes the sole staple, and tobacco
is produced, whatever be the state of the market, and whatever be
the condition of the soil. This peculiarity of slave labour, as we shall
see, involves some very important consequences.
Such being the character of slave-labour, as an industrial instru-
ment, let us now consider the qualities of the agency with which,
in the colonization of North America, it was brought into competition.
This was the labour of peasant proprietors, a productive instrument,
in its merits and defects, the exact reverse of that with which it was
called upon to compete. Thus, the great and almost the sole excel-
lence of slave labour is, as we have seen, its capacity for organization;
and this is precisely the circumstance with respect to which the labour
of peasant proprietors is especially defective. In a community of
peasant proprietors, each workman labours on his own account, with-
out much reference to what his fellow-workmen are doing. There
is no commanding mind to whose guidance the whole labour force
562 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
will yield obedience, and under whose control it may be directed 1
skilful combinations to the result which is desired. Nor does this
system afford room for classification and economical distribution of
a labour force in the same degree as the system of slavery. Under
the latter, for example, occupation may be found for a whole famil}-
of slaves, according to the capacity of each member, in performing
the different operations connected with certain branches of industry.
Thus, in the culture of tobacco, the women and children may be
employed in picking the worms off the plants, or gathering the leaves
as they become ripe, while the men are engaged in the more laborious
tasks. But it is otherwise when the cultivator is a small proprietor.
His children are at school, and his wife finds enough to occupy her
in her domestic duties: he can, therefore, command for all operations,
however important or however insignificant, no other labour than
his own, or that of his grown-up sons — labour which would be greatly
misapplied in performing such manual operations as I have described.
His team of horses might be standing idle in the stable, while he was
gathering tobacco leaves or picking worms, an arrangement which
would render his work exceedingly costly. The system of peasant
proprietorship, therefore, does not admit of combination and classi-
fication of labour in the same degree as that of slavery. But if in
this respect it lies under a disadvantage as compared with its rival,
in every other respect it enjoys an immense superiority. The peasant
proprietor, appropriating the whole produce of his toil, needs no other
stimulus to exertion. Superintendence is here completely dispensed
with. The labourer is under the strongest conceivable inducement
to put forth, in the furtherance of his task, the full powers of his mind
and body; and his mind, instead of being purposely stinted and stupe-
fied, is enlightened by education, and aroused by the prospect of
reward.
Such are the two productive agencies which came into competi-
tion on the soil of North America. If we now turn to the external
conditions under which the competition took place, we shall, I think,
have no difficulty in understanding the success of each respectively
in that portion of the Continent in which it did in fact succeed.
The line dividing the Slave from the Free States marks also an
important division in the agricultural capabilities of North America.
North of this line, the products for which the soil and climate are
best adapted are cereal crops, while south of it the prevailing crops
are tobacco, rice, cotton, and sugar; and these two classes of crops
are broadly distinguished in the methods of culture suitable to each.
SLAVERY AND THE SOUTH 563
The cultivation of the one class, of which cotton may be taken as the
type, requires for its efficient conduct that labour should be com-
bined and organized on an extensive scale. On the other hand, for
the raising of cereal crops this condition is not so essential. Even
where labour is abundant and that labour free, the large capitalist
does not in this mode of farming appear on the whole to have any
preponderating advantage over the small proprietor, who, with his
family, cultivates his own farm, as the example of the best cultivated
states in Europe proves. Whatever superiority he may have in the
power of combining and directing labour seems to be compensated
by the greater energy and spirit which the sense of property gives to
the exertions of the small proprietor. But there is another essential
circumstance in which these two classes of crops differ. A single
labourer, Mr. Russell tells us, can cultivate twenty acres of wheat
or Indian corn, while he cannot manage more than two of tobacco,
or three of cotton. It appears from this that tobacco and cotton
fulfil that condition which we saw was essential to the economical
employment of slaves — the possibility of working large numbers
within a limited space; while wheat and Indian corn, in the cultiva-
tion of which the labourers are dispersed over a wide surface, fail
in this respect. We thus find that cotton, and the class of crops
of which cotton may be taken as the type, favour the employment
of slaves in the competition with peasant proprietors in two leading
ways: first, they need extensive combination and organization of
labour — requirements which slavery is eminently calculated to sup-
ply, but in respect to which the labour of peasant proprietors is de-
fective; and secondly, they allow of labour being concentrated, and
thus minimize the cardinal evil of slave labour — the reluctance with
which it is yielded. On the other hand, the cultivation of cereal
crops, in which extensive combination of labour is not important,
and in which the operations of industry are widely diffused, offers
none of these advantages for the employment of slaves, while it is
remarkably fitted to bring out in the highest degree the especial
excellencies of the industry of free proprietors. Owing to these causes
it has happened that slavery has been maintained in the Southern
States, which favour the growth of tobacco, cotton, and analogous
products, while, in the Northern States, of which cereal crops are
the great staple, it from an early period declined and has ultimately
died out. And, in confirmation of this view, it may be added that
wherever in the Southern States the external conditions are especially
favourable to cereal crops, as in parts of Virginia, Kentucky, and
564 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
Missouri, and along the slopes of the Alleghanies, there slavery has
always failed to maintain itself. It is owing to this cause that there
now exists in some parts of the South a considerable element of free
labouring population.
These considerations appear to explain the permanence of slaven
in one division of North America, and its disappearance from the other
but there are other conditions essential to the economic success 01
the institution besides those which have been brought into view in
the above comparison, to which it is necessary to advert in order to
a right understanding of its true basis. These are high fertility of
the soil, and a practically unUmited extent of it.
The necessity of these conditions to slavery will be apparent by
reflecting on the unskilfulness and want of versatiHty in slave labour
to which we have already referred.
B. Cheapness of Slave Labor, i8j2 ^
The friends of the system argued that slave labor was not only more permanent
than free labor, but also that it was cheaper. The following is typical of the more
moderate claims of the time for the cheapness of slave labor:
Probably, however, the greatest advantage we have over the
Indian producers is in the cheapness of our labor. It is true that
wages are very low in India, but the labor is also inefficient. We
have the cheapest and most efficient labor in the world.
The African slave in the southern states is well fed with good
and substantial food, that gives him strength, endurance, and health.
He is well clad in winter, and well lodged, to protect him from the
inclemencies of the season. He is cheerful, able to work, and he works
faithfully. As the whole cost of this labor to the state is made up of
the simplest necessaries of life, the support of the young, and the
old, and the feeble, it is evident that the south has the cheapest labor
that is possible. It was the doctrine of Malthus, that in every country
there is a constant tendency to reduce the wages of labor down to the
mere support of the laborer. That limit, however approximated to
elsewhere, has never been reached but in the south.
The slave is supplied with all he wants of meal, and with as much
meat as is needed for his health and strength. This meal is prepared
in many ways, and makes a most palatable bread. His master
generally feeds on it in preference to flour. He has a garden, where
> Eighty Years' Progress. By Professor C. F. McCay, of Columbia, South
Carolina (Hartford, 1869), 1 19-21.
SLAVERY AND THE SOUTH 565
he can raise potatoes, cabbages, collards, greens, turnips, beans, and
such other vegetables as the taste and industry of the family may
desire. He has clothing — cheap, it is true, but warm and substantial.
There is a separate dwelling for each family, and an unlimited
supply of fuel for the winter. The old, who are unable to labor in
the field, find some slight work about the house — the men in the
garden, the women in the care of young children whose mothers are
out on the usual plantation work. . . .
Another element of the cheapness of this labor is that nothing is
wasted in vicious indulgences. In other countries, a large part of
the wages of labor is expended in strong drink; but the most stringent
laws are everywhere passed against selling spirits to slaves; the Maine
liquor law is enforced with the most severe penalties, and with the
utmost certainty of conviction for the guilty.
Much time is lost in free countries in holidays and shows; in idle-
ness and neglect of work; in seeking employment; in change from
one place to another; but all this is saved in the south, for there are
no idle hands about the plantation, and, excepting the week between
Christmas and New Year's day, when there is a general holiday,
there is no lost time, except from sickness, in any part of the year.
The children are all put at work at eleven or twelve years of age,
as soon as they are able to guide a plough or pick cotton in the fields.
The women and men are both efficient workers, and the division of
labor is so complete that the children of many mothers are watched
over and cared for by one, and the cooking for many families attended
to by a single cook.
This system of labor is thus the cheapest possible. The corn and
the meat being, in most cases, raised on the plantation, and not bur-
dened with the cost of transportation, are supplied at the cheapest
prices; the work is all light and easy, so that women and boys, as
well as men, can engage in it efiiciently. Every thing is arranged
so that labor is secured at the lowest possible rate. . . .
The culture of cotton is specially suited for slave labor, because
of its giving full employment for the whole year. January is devoted
to fitting up the fences, clearing off the decayed trees that have fallen
in the fields, and putting in order the cultivators and all the imple-
ments of the farm. The ploughs are also started, and some of the
ground broken up for spring planting. February is the main time
for ploughing, and in the more southern part of the cotton country,
corn is planted in this month. In latitude 31° the time for corn is
the 20th of February; above this line it gradually becomes later.
566 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
About a month after the corn, cotton is planted. In every locality
it is desired to have the cotton up as soon as the fear of frost is gone.
The season for planting begins as early as the 15th of March in the most
southern latitudes, is delayed to the ist of April at the parallel of 32°,
to the 15th in latitude 34°, and later still above this line. As the seed
are planted close together in drills, the hands pass along the rows and
chop down the weakest and smallest plants, leaving them in bunches,
fifteen to twenty inches apart. The ploughs follow or precede the
hoes, both being necessary to kill tlje grass and soften the ground
about the plants. The hoes follow again, and thin out the bunches
to one or two stalks, and finally they are reduced to one, the rest
having perished from the cutworm or insects, or the blows of the
plough and the hoe. For two or three months this hoeing and plough-
ing, to soften the ground and destroy the grass, gives full employment
to the hands. The corn has also to be treated in the same way, and
the work is continued on both until the summer has come and the
fruit begins to appear on the cotton. There is a little leisure now to
the hands before the picking is begun, and this gives time to harvest
the wheat that has been sown; to cut the oats, and gather the fodder
from the corn. This work fills up the time until the picking begins.
At first, but few of the pods are open. The hands pass between the
rows — which are from three to four feet wide on the poor lands,
and from six to seven on the richest — and as the branches stretch
out so as to reach each other, they each gather from two rows as they
pass through the field. By September the fields are white with the
opening cotton, and every hand, young and old, male and female,
that can be of any service, is busied in gathering the cotton, lest the
rain should come and beat it out, and scatter it on the ground. In
October this picking continues undiminished. At the close of this
month, frost usually appears, and stops the growth of the plant and
kills the leaves, but the pods keep opening, and new cotton offering
itself to the hands until December. The fields are picked over twice
or three times if the season is favorable and the crop large, and five
or six times if the opening cotton does not hurry the planter. The
gathered cotton has now to be sunned, and dried, and ginned, and
packed, and delivered at the nearest railway station or river landing,
or sold in the neighboring town. Thus is the year completed with
unremitting toil, from Christmas to Christmas.
The distribution of labor between the white and l)lack races,
so that the former shall have the selection of the products and of
the place of labor, of the seeds and the mode of cultivation, and of
SLAVERY AND THE SOUTH 567
all the plans and management of the plantation, is another great aid
to the cheapness and the efficiency of the labor.
Some political economists have supposed that free is cheaper than
slave labor; but though there are pursuits where the watchfulness,
foresight, intelligence, and energy of a free man will make his labor
so much more productive than that of a slave as to pay the superior
cost of his support, it is certain that the want of these qualities in the
slave is but a slight drawback to the value of his labor in the produc-
tion of cotton. The work is so regular, and simple, and easy, that
the free man performs it no better than the slave, and as the direction,
and management, and skill are in the master, the work is well directed,
and wisely managed. The slave works enough, though he does not
work as hard as some free men. In fact, it is very doubtful if a free
white man, impelled by necessity or the desire of accumulation, would
be more efficient in the cotton field than the slave. Certain it is that
in the south, where the hot sun breeds disease, and the malarious
air brings fevers, the white freeman could not produce as much as
the slave, much less could he labor as cheaply. His expenditures
being more, his wife and children not working at all, or but little,
his waste of time and money in vicious practices and holidays, would
require larger wages, and for these he has nothing more to give than
the slave.
C. Radical View on the Efficiency of Slavery ^ i860 ^
Of all the arguments advanced in support of the contention that slavery was
efficient and economical, none was more radical than that advanced by Mr. Wolfe,
of Virginia, in his reply to the arguments made in Helper's Impending Crisis. The
following extract is illustrative of the more extreme view on the subject :
We will now consider some of the statistical fallacies of Helper's
book. Not only does this incendiary work abound with incentives
to treason, massacre, and bloody revolution, but the statistics are
fallacious, and evidently prepared for the purpose of deceiving the
ignorant and fanatical portion of the community. The attentive and
intelligent reader, who will take the trouble of examining them closely,
will easily detect their fallacy. By way of showing the superior pro-
ductiveness of the free States over the slave States, he compares the
value of their respective cereals, and gives at page 22 of the Compen-
dium the following results:
^ Helper's Impending Crisis Dissected. By Saml. M. Wolfe (Philadelphia,
i860), 38-45.
568 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
CEREALS
Free States $351,709,70.^
Slave States 306,92 7, o6f
In favor of the free States $ 44,782,636
At page 37 the value of the other agricultural products of the
North and South are compared as follows:
OTHER AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS
Free States $214,422,523
Slave States 155,223,415
In favor of the free States $ 59,199,108
The aggregate difTerence between all the agricultural products of
the South and North thus appear to be:
TOTAL PRODUCTS
Free States $566,132,226
Slave States 462,150,482
In favor of the free States $103,981,744
Now, the fallacy of this deduction will be made clear by turning::
to a table at page 71 of the Compendium, in which the population
of the free and slave States is compared:
Northern population 13,434,922
Southern population 9,612,979
It will be thus seen that the Northern population is one and a
half that of the Southern, and yet it does not produce one-fifth mori .
According to the foregoing figures the North ought to yield, in orcli r
to make its productions equal to the South, $645,682,722, as any school-
boy can calculate by the rule of simple proportion thus:
Southern
Northern
Population
Population
Answer
9,612,979 :
13,434,922 :
: $462,150,482
: $645,684,722
The true state of the case, therefore, is:
What they ought to produce $645,685,722
What the free States do produce 566,132,226
Against the free States and in favor of slave. . $ 79,553,496
SLAVERY AND THE SOUTH 569
Again, if we take the proportion of population to the square mile,
the figures will be still more in favor of the South. According to one
of the tables quoted in Helper's Compendium, (at page 71,) the popu-
lation of the South is only 11.29 the square mile, whereas the popula-
tion of the North is 21.91. By the rule of proportion, the result on
this basis ought to be:
Pop. Sq. M. Pop. Sq. M. Answer
11.29 : 21.91 : : $462,150,482 : $898,469,181
Now let us subtract what the North actually produces from what
it ought to produce on this basis, as follows:
What it ought to produce $898,469,182
What it actually produced 566,132,226
Against the free States $332,336,956
It will be thus seen, according to Helper's own figures, that there
is a balance of $332,336,956 against the free States, and in favor of
the slave, instead of $103,981,744 to the credit of the Northern States,
as the dishonest writer pretends. - If we add these two amounts
together, the result will show that he lies for abolition to the trifling
sum of $436,318,700 — four hundred and thirty-six millions, three
hundred and eighteen thousand, seven hundred dollars?
Such is a specimen of his statistics, on which as Uttle reliance is
to be placed as on his other facts and arguments against the South.
The book is a tissue of falsehoods worthy of the bad cause for which
it is written, and its endorsement is a disgrace to all who have given
it the sanction of their names.
The ingenuity of man never devised a more effectual or plausible
mode of deceiving and misleading the human understanding, than a
shrewd arrangement of figures. By this device. Helper has, by an
assumed fairness in forming statistical tables, been able to render his
book plausible to many persons who are too apt, in most matters,
to take whatever is presented to their understanding in the shape of
figures, as so; — believing it to be a work of too much labor for figures
to lie.
The analysis, however, of Helper's figures, shows a studied and
wanton misrepresentation of important facts. In one table he
arranges the respective products of the North and South, and very
clearly, as he asserts, shows that white labor is much more productive
than slave labor. It is due to the superior ingenuity and skill of the
white man over the dull and torpid African to admit that fact; but
570 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
we deny that Helper has honestly shown it; upon the contrary we
show that, by a fair comparison of the number of inhabitants to the
square mile, the South produces much more than the North. . . .
The exportable products of the fifteen Slave States amount annu-
ally to $270,000,000 exclusive of gold and foreign merchandise re-
exported; and their annual demand for the productions of other
countries is about $225,000,000. There are 80,000 cotton planta-
tions in the South, and the aggregate value of their annual products is
$128,000,000. There are 16,000 tobacco plantations, and their an-
nual products amount to $15,000,000. There are 2,600 sugar plan-
tations, the products of which average annually $13,000,000. There
are 700 rice plantations, which yield annually a revenue of $6,000,000.
Bread-stuffs and provisions yield $78,000,000; the products of the
forest amount to $10,700,000; manufactures yield $31,000,000; and
the products of the sea yield $3,356,000; exclusive of $30,000,000
we send to the North!
.These facts and figures rest mostly upon the authority of the
Southern Cultivator, De Bow's Review, and the speeches in Congress
of Senator Hammond, and Hon. L. M. Keitt, M. C. of South Carolina.
But we are happy to find them sustained by the Secretary of the
Treasury, in a late Report; and laid before Congress by ''His Excel-
lency President Buchanan," and by him endorsed.
The Secretary of the Treasury, in a late Report, sets down the
exportation of domestic produce, exclusive of specie, at $266,438, 051.
Of this amount, cotton, which is exclusively from the South, furnishes
$128,382,351; tobacco gives $12,221,843, and rice yields $2,390,233,^ —
both of which, also, are exclusively Southern; breadstuff s and pro-
visions are estimated at $77,686,455; products of the forests at $10,-
694,184; of manufactures at $30,970,992; of the sea at $3,356,797.
Now take $128,382,351 for the value of cotton, and $12,221,843 for
tobacco, and $2,390,233 for rice, which are exclusively Southern
staples, and we have the sum of $142,994,427, which the South con-
tributes to the exportations of the country, in these staple products,
which, in the Union, are only raised within her limits. But her con-
tribution does not stop here. Of the $77,686,455 furnished by bread-
stuffs and provisions, she contributed at least $25,000,000; of the
products of the forest, in the shape of lumber, etc., she contributed
about $5,000,000, or one-half of the exportation. Then $30,000,000,
added to the $142,994,427, which we have already shown was fur-
nished by cotton, tobacco and rice, make up $172,994,427, out of
the $266,438,051, to which the whole domestic exportation amounts.
SLAVERY AND THE SOUTH
571
This would leave $93,443,051 for the domestic exportation from all
the free States. But this is more than they are entitled to. Of the
$30,970,992 contributed by domestic manufactures, at least
$10,000,000 is the value of the raw material not grown at the North.
This leaves only $83,442,624 as the contribution of the free States,
against $172,994,427, as the contribution of the Southern or slave
States, to the domestic exportation of the country.
D. Cheapness of Free Labor , 182J ^
Perhaps a majority of those who argued on the efficiency and cheapness of
slave and free labor favored the latter system. The friends of free labor pointed
out the inherent tendency of man to shirk labor when he had no direct concern
in its product, and naturally they concluded that the slave would work no more than
was absolutely necessary, and that as a result his output would be less, relative
to his cost, than the output of a free laborer. In some cases friends of free labor
even contended that free men could be induced to labor for less wages than slaves.
If slave labour were cheaper than free labour, we should naturally
expect that, in a state where slavery was allowed, land, ceteris paribus,
would be most valuable in the districts where that system prevailed;
and that in two adjoining states, in the one of which slavery was
allowed, and in the other prohibited, land would be least valuable
in the latter; but the contrary is notoriously the fact. In a late com-
munication from America on this subject, from an intelligent observer,
it is remarked: "The system of slave cultivation, as practised in the
United States of America, has likewise a most destructive effect on
the soil of our country. The state of Maryland, though a slave state,
has comparatively but few slaves in the upper or western part of it;
the land in this upper district is generally more broken by hills and
stones, and is not so fertile as that on the southern and eastern parts.
The latter has also the advantage of being situated upon the navigable
rivers that flow into the Chesapeake Bay, and its produce can be
conveyed to market at one-third of the average expense of that from
the upper parts of the state; yet, with all these advantages of soil,
situation, and cHmate, the land within the slave district will not, upon
a general average, sell for half as much per acre as that in the upper
districts, which is cultivated principally by free men. This fact may
be also further and more strikingly illustrated by the comparative
value of land within the states of Virginia and Pennsylvania, the one
lying on the south, and the other on the north side of Maryland;
^ A Letter to M. Jean-Baptiste Say, on the Comparative Expense of Free and
Slave Labour. By Adam Hodgson (Liverpool, 1823), 13-17, ^•9-30-
572 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
the one a slave, the other a free state. In Virginia, land of the same
natural soil and local advantages, will not sell for one- third as high a
price as the same description of land will command in Pennsylvania.
This single, plain, incontrovertible fact speaks volumes upon the
relative value of slave and free labor, and it is presumed renders any
further illustration unnecessary."
If slave labour were cheaper than free labour, we might fairly
infer that, in a state in which slavery was allowed, free labour would
be reduced by competition to a level with the labour of slaves, and
not slave labour to a level with the labour of freemen; and that in
two adjoining states, in the one of which slavery was allowed, and
in the other prohibited, labour would be highest, ceteris paribus, in
that in which slavery was proscribed. But experience proves the
reverse. . . . WTien in Norfolk, Virginia, in the winter of 1820, I was
told, that many slaves gave their masters two dollars, or nine shillings
per week, for permission to w^ork for themselves, and retain the surplus.
I also found, that the common wages of slaves who are hired, were
20 s. 3 d. per week and their food, at the very time when flour was
4 dollars, or 18 s., per barrel of 196 lbs., and beef and mutton 3d. to
4d. per lb. Five days afterward, in travelling through the rich agri-
cultural districts of the free state of Pennsylvania, I found able
bodied white men willing to work for their food only. This, indeed,
was in the winter months, and during a period of extraordinary
pressure.
I was told, however, that the average agricultural wages in this
free state, were 5 or 6 dollars per month, and food; while, in Norfolk,
at the time I allude to, they were 18 dollars per month, and food.
If it should be replied, that in the town of Norfolk wages were likely
to be much higher than in the country, I would ask, why they are
not so in the principal towns of Russia?
If slave labour were cheaper than free labour, we should naturally
expect to find it employed in the cultivation of those articles in
which extended competition had reduced profits to the lowest point.
On the contrary, however, we find that slave labour is gradually
exterminated when brought into competition with free labour, ex-
cept where legislative protection, or peculiarity of soil and climate,
establish such a. monopoly as to admit of an expensive system of
management. The cultivation of indigo by slaves in Carolina, has
been abandoned, and the price of cotton reduced one-half, since
these articles have had to compete in the European markets with the
productions of free labour; and notwithstanding an additional duty ^
SLAVERY AND THE SOUTH 573
on East India sugar of 10 s. per cwt. and a transportation of three
times the distance, the West India planters are beyond all doubt
reduced to very great distress, and declare that they shall be ruined
if sugar from the East Indies shall be admitted on the same terms
as from the West.
If slave laboQr were cheaper than free labour, we might reason-
ably infer, that in proportion as the circumstances of the cultivators
rendered economy indispensable, either from the difl&culty of obtaining
slaves, or other causes, the pecuHar features of slavery would be more
firmly established, and that every approach to freedom would be
more sedulously shunned in the system of culture. But it is found
by the experience of both ancient and modern times, that nothing
has tended more to assimilate the condition of the slave to that of
the free labourer, or actually to effect his emancipation, than the
necessity imposed by circumstances of adopting the most economical
mode of cultivation. . . .
If, then, it has appeared that we should be naturally led to infer,
from the very constitution of human nature, that slave labour is more
expensive than the labour of freemen; if it has appeared that such
has been the opinion of the most eminent philosophers and enlight-
ened travellers in different ages and countries; if it has appeared
that in a state where slavery is allowed, land is most valuable in those
districts where the slave system prevails the least, notwithstanding
great disadvantages of locality; and that in adjoining states, with
precisely the same soil and climate, in the one of which slavery is
allowed, and in the other prohibited, land is most valuable in that
state in which it is proscribed; if it has appeared that slave labour
has never been able to maintain its ground in competition with free
labour, except where monopoly has secured high profits, or prohibitory
duties afforded artificial support; if it has appeared that, in every
quarter of the globe, in proportion as the circumstances of the planter
rendered attention to economy more indispensable, the harsher fea-
tures of the slave-system have disappeared, and the condition of the
slave has been gradually assimilated to that of the free labourer;
and if it has appeared that the mitigation of slavery has been found
by experience to substitute the alacrity of voluntary labour, for
the reluctance of compulsory toil; and that emancipation has rendered
the estates on which it has taken place, greatly and rapidly more
productive — I need not, I think, adduce additional proofs of the
truth of the general position, that slave labour is more expensive
than the labour of freemen.
574 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
E. Heavy Expense of Slave Labor ^ i8jg ^
In any examination of the relative cost of the two systems of labor, the^noe
of slaves necessarily occupied a prominent place. This phase of the subject was
carefully considered by an English traveler, Mr. Buckingham, as follows:
On this question, of the false economy of employing slave-labour
in the cultivation of the land, every thing I heard and saw confirmed
me in the opinion, that it was most injurious to the interests of the
planters; and that none would benefit more by a system of free labour
than the very landowners themselves. At present, if a planter wishes
to purchase an estate for cultivation, he can get looo acres of land
for loooo dollars; and if he could obtain free labour to till his fields,
hiring it by the day, and paying for such labour as he required, and
no more, 5000 dollars would be ample for a reserved capital by which
to procure his seed, labour, and stock. But as he must, according
to the present system, buy his slaves as well as his land, it will require
at least 500 dollars, or £100 sterling, for each working negro that he
may need; and supposing only 100 negroes to be purchased, this
would require 50,000 dollars to be laid out in the purchase of pro-
spective labour, paying for it before he receives the slightest benefit,
and under all the risks of sickness, desertion, and death. In this
manner, according to the statement of Mr. Clay, in his recent Anti-
abolition speech in Congress, there is locked up, of dead capital, in
the purchase and cost of the negro slaves of the United States, the
enormous sum of twelve hundred millions of dollars, or about two
hundred and fifty millions sterling! Now, if slavery had never been
permitted to exist here, and labour could have been hired by the
day, or week, or year, as in other free countries, this enormous amount
of capital would have been available to devote to other purposes;
and the whole country would have been advanced at least a century
beyond its present condition.
It may be quite true that the African race can alone sustain the
exposure to heat and labour combined, which the cultivation of rice,
sugar, and cotton, demand; but it is at the same time as true, that
their labour might be hired and paid for only as it was employed^
instead of the ruinously improvident system of buying up all the labour
of their lives, and paying for it beforehand; thus sinking an immense
capital in the very country where capital is more valual^le, because
more productive of wealth, than in any other country that can b^
* The Slave States of America. By J. S. Buckingham (London [1842]), I, 200-3J
40l~3. i
SLAVERY AND THE SOUTH 575
named. If a large manufacturer in England, when he had built his
mill and fitted his machinery, were required to buy all his working
hands at £100 each, and then maintain them all their lives, sick or
well, aged or infirm, with the risk of loss by desertion or death, he
would be less able to work his mill with £100,000 than he now is with
£20,000; and consequently not half or a fourth of the mills now in
operation could be established. If a shipowner, when he had built,
equipped, and provisioned his ship for her voyage, had to buy up all
his seamen at £100 a head, and maintain them all their lives after-
wards, it would require four times the capital that is now necessary
to send a large ship to sea, and consequently fewer persons could
equip vessels. Thus the manufacturing and the shipping interests
would both be retarded in their progress by this improvident and
heavy burden of paying for a life of labour in advance, instead
of paying for it by the week or the month, as its benefits were
reaped by them.
Exactly the same effects are produced in retarding the prosperity
of agriculture; and thus it is that the old slave-states of Virginia and
Maryland are already exhausted. The Carolinas and Georgia are al-
ready partially so; and in process of time this will be the fate of Ala-
bama, Mississippi, Kentucky, and the other slave-states; while those
who employ the cheaper, more vigorous, and more productive element
of free labour, will outstrip them in the race, from the mere advantage
of a better system of industry. While I believe, therefore, that the
condition of the slaves would be much improved by their being
placed under the influence of those higher and better motives to
labour which the enjoyment of the reward of their toil can alone
create, I also believe that the planters would all benefit by the sub-
stitution of free-labour for slave-labour, because the former is cheaper
and more productive than the latter can ever be made. The slave-
owners are indeed their own enemies, in opposing or retarding the
emancipation of their labourers. . . .
In the course of the protracted conversation to which these topics
led, a gentleman from Kentucky, engaged in the growing of corn
and grazing of cattle, himself a slaveholder to a considerable extent,
and joining in all the denunciations of the Abolitionists, undertook
to show, that after all, slavery was a much greater curse to the owners
than it was to the slaves, as it absorbed their capital, ate up their
profits, and proved a perpetual obstacle to their progressive prosperity.
He said he had not only made the calculation, but actually tried the
experiment of comparing the labour of the free white man and the
576 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
negro slave; and he found the latter always the dearest of the two.
It took, for instance, 2000 dollars to purchase a good male slave.
The interest of money in Kentucky being ten per cent, here was
200 dollars a year of actual cost; but to insure his life it would require
at least five per cent more, which would make 300 dollars a year. Add
to this the necessary expenses of maintenance while healthy, and
medical attendance while sick, with wages of white overseers to every
gang of men to see that they do their duty, and other incidental
charges, and he did not think that a slave could cost less, in interest,
insurance, subsistence, and watching, than 500 dollars or ioo£ sterling
a year; yet, after all, he would not do more than half the work of a
white man, who could be hired at the same sum, without the outlay of
any capital, or the incumbrance of maintenance while sick, and was,
therefore, by far the cheapest labourer of the two.
F. Radical View on the Inefficiency of Slave Labor ^ i860 *
Not all the radical arguments were advanced by the friends of slavery. Those
opposed to the system were oftentimes biased and intolerant, and even unfair.
Perhaps the best known of the radical opponents of slavery was Mr. Helper of
North Carolina, who pictured the evil effects of slavery on the south as follows:
It is a fact well known to every intelligent Southerner that we
are compelled to go to the North for almost every article of utility
and adornment, from matches, shoepegs and paintings up to cotton-
mills, steamships and statuary; that we have no foreign trade, no
princely merchants, nor respectable artists; that, in comparison with
the free states, we contribute nothing to the literature, polite arts
and inventions of the age; that, for want of profitable employment
at home, large numbers of our native population find themselves
necessitated to emigrate to the West, whilst the free states retain not
only the larger proportion of those born within their own limits, but
induce, annually, hundreds of thousands of foreigners to settle and
remain amongst them; that almost everything produced at the
North meets with ready sale, while, at the same time, there is no
demand, even among our own citizens, for the productions of Southern
industry; that, owing to the absence of a proper system of business
amongst us, the North becomes, in one way or another, the proprietor
and dispenser of all our floating wealth, and that we are dependent
on Northern capitalists for the means necessary to build our railroads,
canals and other public improvements; that if we want to visit a
' The Impending Crisis. By Hinton R. Helper (New York, i860), 21-4.
SLAVERY AND THE SOUTH
577
foreign country, even though it may He directly South of us, we find
no convenient way of getting there except by taking passage through
a Northern port; and that nearly all the profits arising from the
exchange of commodities, from insurance and shipping offices, and
from the thousand and one industrial pursuits of the country, accrue
to the North, and are there invested in the erection of those mag-
nificent cities and stupendous works of art which dazzle the eyes of
the South, and attest the superiority of free institutions!
The North is the Mecca of our merchants, and to it they must
and do make two pilgrimages per annum — one in the spring and one
in the fall. All our commercial, mechanical, manufactural, and
literary supplies come from there. We want Bibles, brooms, buckets
and books, and we go to the North; we want pens, ink, paper, wafers
and envelopes, and we go to the North; we want shoes, hats, handker-
chiefs, umbrellas and pocket knives, and we go to the North; we want
furniture, crockery, glassware and pianos, and we go to the North;
we want toys, primers, school books, fashionable apparel, machinery,
medicines, tomb-stones, and a thousand other things, and we go to
the North for them all. Instead of keeping our money in circulation
at home, by patronizing our own mechanics, manufacturers, and
laborers, we send it all away to the North, and there it remains;
it never falls into our hands again.
In one way or another we are more or less subservient to the North
every day of our lives. In infancy we are swaddled in Northern
muslin; in childhood we are humored with Northern gewgaws; in
youth we are instructed out of Northern books; at the age of maturity
we sow our "wild oats" on Northern soil^ in middle-life we exhaust
our wealth, energies and talents in the dishonorable vocation of
entailing our dependence on our children and on our children's chil-
dren, and, to the neglect of our own interests and the interests of
those around us, in giving aid and succor to every department of
Northern power; in the decline of life we remedy our eye-sight with
Northern spectacles, and support our infirmities with Northern
canes; in old age we are drugged with Northern physic; and,
finally, when we die, our inanimate bodies, shrouded in Northern
cambric, are stretched upon the bier, borne to the grave in a Northern
carriage, entombed with a Northern spade, and memorized with a
Northern slab!
But it can hardly be necessary to say more in illustration of this
unmanly and unnational dependence, which is so glaring that it can-
not fail to be apparent to even the most careless and superficial ob-
578 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
server. All the world sees, or. ought to see, that in a commercial,
mechanical, manufactural, financial, and literary point of view, we are
as helpless as babes; that, in comparison with the Free States, our
agricultural resources have been greatly exaggerated, misunderstood
and mismanaged; and that, instead of cultivating among ourselves
a wise poHcy of mutual assistance and co-operation with respect to
individuals, and of self-reliance with respect to the South at large,
instead of giving countenance and encouragement to the industrial
enterprises projected in our midst, and instead of building up, aggran-
dizing and beautifying our own States, cities and towns, we have been
spending our substance at the North and are daily augmenting and
strengthening the very power which now has us so completely under
its thumb. . . .
II. Southern Agriculture
An Unfavorable View, i860 ^
The way in which agriculture was carried on in all parts of the country robbed
the soil of much of its fertility; but it was more especially in the south, where the
heavy crops of cotton, tobacco and sugar cane were grown, that the "mining" of
the soil progressed most rapidly. An authority on southern agriculture called
attention in i860 to the defective system of agriculture in that section as follows:
In no part of Christendom, enjoying a good government, and
settled by an intelligent population, does land sell at so contempt-
ible a price as in the Plantation States. In Georgia, for instance,
land does not command an average price of five dollars per acre. Vari-
ous causes have been assigned for this low value. It will be instructive
to examine them.
The reason generally assigned at the South is the proximity of
an abundance of cheap fertile lands at the West. If this be a sound
reason at the South, it should also be true at the North, as it is as
easy to reach new lands from New York as it is from Georgia. But
land is steadily rising in value in New York and other northern States.
The proximity of new lands cannot, therefore, be the cause of the
low price of land at the South, as it does not produce this result at
the North.
It is said, again, that the supply of land is greater than the demand,
in consequence of the sparseness of our population; capital seeks its
» Report of the Commissioner of Patents for the Year i860. Agriculture
(Washington, 1861), 225-7. Article by Rev. C. W. Howard, Associate Editor ol
the SoiUkem Cultivator, Kingston, Georgia.
SLAVERY AND THE SOUTH 579
most profitable investment. There is money enough in the Southern
States to have given a much higher value to our land. But the
truth is that prudent men have found that, under our present system,
land will not pay an interest on more than its present price. Hence
this capital, instead of being invested in land, is appropriated to the
building of railroads, factories, &c. It will also be found that in the
Southern States where the white population is least dense the lands
are highest in price, and the reverse.
Many persons suppose that it is the form of labor prevalent at
the South which diminishes the value of Southern lands. This
supposition is worthy of a brief consideration.
The remarks made upon it will not touch the moral or political
aspect of Negro Slavery; it will be considered merely as a matter of
agricultural interest.
If Negro Slavery diminishes the value of Southern lands, it must
produce this result in some one of the following forms.
Before noticing these forms it may be proper to make the general
remark that at the South where the negroes are the most numerous
the lands bear the highest price, as the rice, Sea Island cotton, and
sugar-cane lands. Some of our best rice lands now command from
two hundred to three hundred dollars an acre. The reason of this
high price will be given hereafter.
Does slave labor affect injuriously the value of Southern lands
from its want of constancy? It is the most constant form of labor.
The negro has no court-house, no jury, no musters, no mill to attend.
He has no provision to buy, and no anxiety or loss of time on this
account; food for himself and family is provided. If his family are
sick, careful nurses are provided for them. The details of cotton
and rice culture could not be conducted with a form of labor less
constant.
Is there a deficiency of vigor in slave labor? In all forms of out-
of-door bodily and severe labor, to be continued for a length of time,
the well-fed negro is more capable than the white man. The regular
and almost universal allowance of food upon plantations shows that,
as a general rule, the negroes have a sufficiency of hearty and nutri-
tious food.
Is there a deficiency of intelligence in Slave labor? There is less
intelligence than among white laborers at the North, in Scotland, and
some parts of England; but not less intelligence than exists among
the mass of French, Irish, and Belgian laborers. Yet land rates as
high in Belgium as in any other part of Europe. The cultivation
58o READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
is also as perfect as can be found elsewhere. It is not so much the
intelligence of the laborers as of the controlling and directing mind,
which is of the greatest moment in agriculture.
Is there a deficiency of economy in slave labor? The entire ex-
pense of a negro laborer on a plantation cannot be put down at more
than fifty cents a day. Can any other labor in this country be ob-
tained as cheaply as this? Beyond this, multitudes of men have
largely increased their fortunes by the natural increase of their labor-
ing force.
If there be no deficiency in the constancy, vigor, intelligence, or
economy of slave labor, it cannot be supposed, with justice, to affect
the value unfavorably of Southern land.
In the present excited state of the ptiblic mind it is proper to re-
peat the remark that this brief inquiry is made, not with a view to
exciting discussion of a vexed topic, but solely of arriving at the true
cause of the low price of Southern land, and of suggesting a remedy.
This inquiry could not be conducted without an examination of the
character of the labor employed upon the land.
Does the Southern climate affect injuriously the price of Southern
lands? It does not; because the lands are of the greatest value
(greater than anywhere else in the Union) in those parts of the South
which are not sickly, as the rice lands. As a general remark, the
climate of the middle belt of the Southern States, including rolling
oak and hickory lands, very closely resembles the climate of France,
which is considered to be the best climate of Europe for agricultural
purposes. In most of this region there are but few days in winter
in which the plough need be stopped on account of the frozen state
of the earth.
Is there a deficiency in the natural fertility of the Southern soil?
No one will pretend to say that the original fertility of the great
body of the Southern States was inferior to that of the Middle and
Northern States, where land has attained a great comparative
value.
Is there a deficiency in the salable value of Southern products of
the soil? These products generally command a better price at the
South than the North. The most valuable products of the South,
cotton and rice, are peculiar to it.
If the low value of landed estate at the South is to be attributed
neither to the proximity of cheap Western lands, to slave labor, to
defective climate, to sparseness of population, or deficiency in the
vahip of its products, to what is this low value attributable?
SLAVERY AND THE SOUTH 581
The answer is, to the Defective System of Southern Agriculture.
That system is defective, among others, in the following particulars:
I St. This system is such that the planter scarcely considers his
land as a part of his permanent investment. It is rather a part of
his current expenses. He buys a wagon and uses it until it is worn
out, and then throws it away. He buys a plough or hoe, and treats
both in the same way. He buys land, uses it until it is exhausted,
and then sells it, as he sells scrap iron, for whatever it will bring.
It is with him a perishable or movable property. It is something to
be worn out, not improved. The period of its endurance is therefore
estimated in the original purchase, and the price is regulated accord-
ingly. If it be very rich level land, that will last a number of years,
the purchaser will pay a fair price for it. But if it be rolling land, as
is the great bulk of the interior of the Southern States, he considers
how much of the tract is washed or worn out, how long the fresh land
will last, how much is too broken for cultivation, and in view of these
points determines the value of the property. Of course he places a
low estimate upon it.
2d. The system of Southern agriculture is such that a very large
proportion of the landed estate yields no annual income. A consider-
able amount is in woodland, yielding nothing but a supply of rails
and fuel. This is to a great degree dead capital. A large number of
acres on almost every farm in the older parts of the cotton States
is worn out and at rest — of course paying no interest. The only
paying part of the tract is that which is under the plough. The in-
terest on the land which the planter does not cultivate must be charged
to that which he does cultivate, and this brings down the value of
the whole property to a very low figure.
3d. The Southern system of agriculture allows to land no value
independent of the labor put upon it. The negro is the investment
rather than the land. The value of the negro is instantly affected
by a change in the price of cotton, while the value of the land which
grows the cotton is comparatively unaffected. It is an extraordinary
anomaly that perishable labor should take precedence of imperishable
land. ' It is not uncommon to hear young men at the South giving
it as a reason for their entering a profession, that while they owned
a large body of land they owned but twenty or thirty negroes, and
that it would be impossible to make a support with so small a force.
When asked how the rest of the world managed who have no negroes,
the reply is ''our system differs from theirs, ours requires a large
amount of labor."
582 READINGS IN ECONOMIC fflSTORY
Precisely, and therein it is defective, and until that defect be reme-
died, land will continue to be comparatively a drug in the mark.
It is the design of this Essay to show that it is possible to give h.
a value independent of any costly or compHcated annual labor be-
stowed upon it.
4th. The Southern system of agriculture includes a succession ol
crops of a most exhausting or otherwise injurious character. These
crops are cotton and corn, varied only by small grain. This succession
is continued until the land is worn out and turned out to rest.
5th. These crops are not only exhausting and hurtful in conse-
quence of the clean culture they require, but they also require an
amount of labor not known elsewhere. If we consider the amount
of productive land, that is, the number of acres yielding an annual
income, we shall find the amount of labor used on an ordinary South-
ern plantation to be greater per productive acre than the amount o]
labor use in the most perfectly cultivated portions of Europe. In
the latter every acre produces something, whether in pasture, meadow,
or cultivated crops. At the South nothing but the cotton or grain
pays. The rest of the plantation is idle.
III. Plantation Management
A. Instructions of a Mississippi Planter to his Overseer ^ iS^y ^
Many of the planters laid down definite rules for the management of theii
plantations and took care to see that their overseers faithfully carried out these
rules as far as possible. The following instructions show the management of the
slaves on a Mississippi plantation:
State of Mississippi, Coahoma County, near Friars Point, A. D
1857.
The health, happiness, good discipline and obedience; good, suf-
ficient and comfortable clothing, a sufficiency of good wholesome anc
nutritious food for both man and beast being indispensably necessar)
to successful planting, as well as for reasonable dividends for tin
amount of capital invested, without saying anything about the Mas
ter's duty to his dependants, to himself and his God — I do herebj
establish the following rules and regulations for the managemen'
of my Prairie Plantation, and require an observance of the same bj
* Documentary History of American Industrial Society. Edited by Ulrich
Phillii>s and others (Cleveland, iqio), I, 112-5. Printed by permission of (
publishers, The Arthur H. Clark Comimny.
SLAVERY AND THE SOUTH 583
any and all Overseers I may at any time have in charge thereof to
wit: —
Punishment must never be cruel or abusive, for it is absolutely
mean and unmanly to whip a negro from mere passion or malice,
and any man who can do this is entirely unworthy and unfit to have
control of either man or beast.
My negroes are permitted to come to me with their complaints
and grievances and in no instance shall they be punished for so doing.
On examination, should I find they have been cruelly treated, it shall
be considered a good and sufficient cause for the immediate discharge
of the Overseer.
Prove and show by your conduct towards the negroes that you
feel a kind and considerate regard for them. Never cruelly punish
or overwork them, never require them to do what they cannot reason-
ably accomplish or otherwise abuse them, but seek to render their
situation as comfortable and contented as possible.
See that their necessities are supplied, that their food and clothing
be good and sufficient, their houses comfortable; and be kind and
attentive to them in sickness and old age.
See that the negroes are regularly fed and that their food be whole-
some, nutritious and well cooked.
See that they keep themselves well cleaned: at least once a week
(especially during summer) inspect their houses and see that they
have been swept clean, examine their bedding and see that they are
occasionally well aired; their clothes mended and everything attended
to that conduces to their health, comfort and happiness.
If any of the negroes have been reported sick, be prompt to see
what ails them and that proper medicine and attention be given
them. Use good judgment and discretion in turning out those who
are getting well.
I greatly desire that the Gospel be preached to the Negroes when
the services of a suitable person can be procured. This should be
done on the Sabbath; day time is preferable, if convenient to the
Minister.
Christianity, humanity and order elevate all — injure none —
whilst infidelity, selfishness and disorder curse some — delude others
and degrade all. I therefore want all of my people encouraged to
cultivate religious feeling and morality, and punished for inhumanity
to their children or stock — for profanity, lying and stealing.
All hands should be required to retire to rest and sleep at a suitable
hour and permitted to remain there until such time as it will be neces-
584 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
sary to get out in time to reach their work by the time they can
well how to work — particularly so when the nights are short and tlic
mornings very cold and inclement.
Allow such as may desire it a suitable piece of ground to raise
potatoes, tobacco. They may raise chickens also with privileges oi
marketing the same at suitable leisure times.
There being a sufficient number of negroes on the plantation for
society among themselves, they are not to be allowed to go off the
plantation merely to seek society, nor on business without a permit
from myself or the Overseer in charge — nor are other negroes allowed
to visit the plantation.
After taking proper care of the negroes, stock, etc. the next most
important duty of the Overseer is to make (if practicable) a sufficient
quantity of corn, hay, fodder, meat, potatoes and other vegetables
for the consumption of the plantation and then as much cotton as
can be made by requiring good and reasonable labor of operatives
and teams.
Have a proper and suitable place for everything and see that
everything is kept in its proper place, all tools when not in use shoulc
be well cleaned and put away.
Let the cotton be well dried before cleaning it. Be sure the seed
put up for planting are well dried and a sufficient quantity saved
to plant the farm two or three times over; and will suggest the pro-
priety of sending a few trustworthy hands ahead of the regular pickers
to gather from the early opening — where the plant is well supplied
with bolls — for seed for planting the ensueing year; in this way by
gathering sufficient quantity every year to plant twenty or twenty
five acres we shall be able to keep up a supply of the best and most
approved Seed — nor should there be less care observed in selecting
the Seed corn from the crib.
I would that every human being have the gospel preached to them
in its original purity and simplicity; it therefore devolves upon me
to have these dependants properly instructed in all that pertains
the salvation of their souls; to this and whenever the services of
suitable person can be secured, have them instructed in these things —
in view of the fanaticism of the age it behooves the Master or Oversc
to be present on all such occasions. They should be instructed
Sundays in the day time if practicable, if not then on Sunday night
J. W. Fowler.
SLAVERY AND THE SOUTH 585
B. Management of Slaves on a Cotton Plantation^ 1852 ^
Detailed instructions for the management of a cotton plantation reveal the
many-sided relations of the owner to his slaves.
My first care has been to select a proper place for my "Quarter,"
well protected by the shade of forest trees, sufficiently thinned out
to admit a free circulation of air, so situated as to be free from the
' impurities of stagnant water, and to erect comfortable houses for my
negroes. Planters do not always reflect that there is more sickness,
and consequently, greater loss of life, from the decaying logs of negro
houses, open floors, leaky roofs, and crowded rooms, than all other
causes combined; and if humanity will not point out the proper
remedy, let self-interest for once act as a virtue, and prompt him to
save the health and lives of his negroes, by at once providing com-
fortable quarters for them. There being upwards of 150 negroes
on the plantation, I provide for them 24 houses made of hewn post
oak, covered with cypress, 16 by 18, with close plank floors and good
chimneys, and elevated two feet from the ground. The ground under
and around the houses is swept every month, and the houses, both
inside and out, white-washed twice a year. The houses are situated
in a double row from north to south, about 200 feet apart, the doors
facing inwards, and the houses being in a line, about 50 feet apart.
At one end of the street stands the overseer's house, workshops, tool
house, and wagon sheds; at the other, the grist and saw-mill, with
good cisterns at each end, providing an ample supply of pure water.
My experience has satisfied me, that spring, well, and lake water are
all unhealthy in this climate, and that large under-ground cisterns,
keeping the water pure and cool, are greatly to be preferred. They
are easily and cheaply constructed, very convenient, and save both
doctors' bills and loss of life. The negroes are never permitted to
sleep before the fire, either lying down or sitting up, if it can be
avoided, as they are always prone to sleep with their heads to the fire,
are liable to be burnt and to contract diseases : but beds with ample
clothing are provided for them, and in them they are made to sleep.
As to their habits of amalgamation and intercourse, I know of no
means whereby to regulate them, or to restrain them; I attempted
it for many years by preaching virtue and decency, encouraging mar-
riages, and by punishing, with some severity, departures from marital
, obligations; but it was aU in vain. I allow for each hand that works
^ The Industrial Resources of the Southern and Western States. Edited by
J. D. B. De Bow (New Orleans, 1852), II, 330-3-
586 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
out, four pounds of clear meat and one peck of meal per week. Their
dinners are cooked for them, and carried to the field, always with vege-
tables, according to the season. There are two houses set apart at
mid-day for resting, eating, and sleeping, if they desire it, and they
retire to one of the weather sheds or the grove to pass this time, not
being permitted to remain in the hot sun while at rest. They cook
their own suppers and breakfasts, each family being provided with
an oven, skillet, and sifter, and each one having a coffee-pot, (and
generally some coffee to put in it,) with knives and forks, plates, spoons,
cups, &c., of their own providing. The wood is regularly furr^ished
them; for I hold it to be absolutely mean for a man to require a negro
to work until daylight closes in, and then force him to get wood,
sometimes half a mile off, before he can get a fire, either to warm him-
self or cook his supper. Every negro has his hen-house, where he
raises poultry, which he is not permitted to sell, and he cooks and
eats his chickens and eggs for his evening and morning meals to suit
himself; besides, every family has a garden, paled in, where they
raise such vegetables and fruits as they take a fancy to. A large house
is provided as a nursery for the children, where all are taken at day-
light, and placed under the charge of a careful and experienced woman,
whose sole occupation is to attend to them, and see that they are
properly fed and attended to, and above all things to keep them as
dry and as cleanly as possible, under the circumstances. The suck-
ling women come in to nurse their children four times during the day;
and it is the duty of the nurse to see that they do not perform this
duty until they have become properly cool, after walking from the
field. In consequence of these regulations, I have never lost a child
from being burnt to death, or, indeed, by accidents of any description;
and although I have had more than thirty born within the last five
years, yet I have not lost a single one from teething, or the ordinary
summer complaints so prevalent amongst the children in this climate.
I give to my negroes four full suits of clothes with two pair of shoes,
every year, and to my women and girls a calico dress and two hand-
kerchiefs extra. I do not permit them to have "truck patches"
other than their gardens, or to raise anything whatever for market;
but in lieu thereof, I give to each head of a family and to every single
negro, on Christmas day, five dollars, and send them to the county
town, under the charge of the overseer or driver, to spend their money.
In this way, I save my mules from being killed up in summer, and
my oxen in winter, by working and hauling off their crops; and more
than all, the negroes are prevented from acquiring habits of trading
SLAVERY AND THE SOUTH 587
in farm produce, which invariably leads to stealing, followed by-
whipping, trouble to the master, and discontent on the part of the
slave. I permit no spirits to be brought on the plantation, or used
by any negro, if I can prevent it; and a violation of this rule, if found
out, is always followed by a whipping, and a forfeiture of the five
dollars next Christmas.
I have a large and comfortable hospital provided for my negroes
when they are sick; to this is attached a nurse's room; and when a
negro complains of being too unwell to work, he is at once sent to the
hospital, and put under the charge of a very experienced and careful
negro woman, who administers the medicine and attends to his diet,
and where they remain until they are able to work again. This woman
is provided with sugar, coffee, molasses, rice, flour, and tea, and does
not permit a patient to taste of meat or vegetables until he is restored
to health. Many negroes relapse after the disease is broken, and die,
in consequence of remaining in their houses and stuffing themselves
with coarse food after their appetites return, and both humanity and
economy dictate that this should be prevented. From the system
I have pursued, I have not lost a hand since the summer of 1845,
(except one that was killed by accident,) nor has my physician's bill
averaged fifty dollars a year, notwithstanding I live near the edge
of the swamp of Big Black River, where it is thought to be very
unhealthy.
I cultivate about ten acres of cotton and six of corn to the hand,
not forgetting the little wheat patch that your correspondent speaks
of, which costs but little trouble, and proves a great comfort to the
negroes; and have as few sour looks and as little whipping as almost
any other place of the same size.
I must not omit to mention that I have a good fiddler, and keep
him well supplied with catgut, and I make it his duty to play for the
negroes every Saturday night until twelve o'clock. They are exceed-
ingly punctual in their attendance at the ball while Charley's fiddle
is always accompanied with Ihurod on the triangle, and Sam to
"pat."
I also employ a good preacher, who regularly preaches to them on
the Sabbath day, and it is made the duty of every one to come up
clean and decent to the place of worship. As Father Garritt regu-
larly calls on Brother Abram (the foreman of the prayer-meeting,)
to close the exercises, he gives out and sings his hymn with much
unction, and always cocks his eye at Charley, the fiddler, as much as
to say, ''Old fellow, you had your time last night; now it is mine."
588 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
I would gladly learn every negro on the place to read the Bible,
but for a fanaticism which, while it professes friendship to the negro,
is keeping a cloud over his mental vision, and almost crushing out
his hopes of salvation.
These are some of the leading outlines of my management, so far
as my negroes are concerned. That they are imperfect, and could be
greatly improved, I readily admit; and it is only with the hope that
I shall be able to improve them by the experience of others, that I
have given them to the public.
Should you come to the conclusion that these rules would be of
any service when made known to others, you will please give them a
place in the ''Review."
A Mississippi Planter.
RULES AND REGULATIONS FOR THE GOVERNMENT OF A SOUTHERN
~- PLANTATION
1. There shall be a place for everything, and everything shall be
kept in its place.
2. On the first days of January and July, there shall be an account
taken of the number and condition of all the negroes, stock, and farm-
ing utensils of every description on the premises, and the same shall
be entered in the plantation book.
3. It shall be the duty of the overseer to call upon the stock-
minder once every day, to know if the cattle, sheep, and hogs have
been seen and counted, and to find out if any are dead, missing, or
lost.
4. It shall be the duty of the overseer, at least once in every week,
to see and count the stock himself, and to inspect the fences, gates,
and water-gaps, on the plantation, and see that they are in good order.
5. The wagons, carts, and all other implements, are to be kept
under the sheds, and in the houses where they belong, except when
in use.
6. Each negro man will be permitted to keep his own axe, and
shall have it forthcoming when required by the overseer. No other
tool shall be taken or used by any negro without the permission of
the overseer.
7. Humanity on the part of the overseer, and unqualified obed
ence on the part of the negro, are, under all circumstances, indis
l)ensable.
8. Whipping, when necessary, shall be in moderation, and ne\ «
done in a passion; and tho drix-er shiill in no instiinre inflict punish
I
SLAVERY AND THE SOUTH 589
ment, except in the presence of the overseer, and when, from sickness,
he is unable to do it himself.
9. The overseer shall see that the negroes are properly clothed
and well fed. He shall lay off a garden of at least six acres, and cul-
tivate it as part of his crop, and give the negroes as many vegetables
as may be necessary.
10. It shall be the duty of the overseer to select a sufficient
number of the women, each week, to wash for all. The clothes shall
be well washed, ironed, and mended, and distributed to the negroes on
Sunday morning; when every negro is expected to wash himself, comb
his head, and put on clean clothes. No washing or other labor will
be tolerated on the Sabbath.
11. The negroes shall not be worked in the rain, or kept out after
night, except in weighing or putting away cotton.
12. It shall be the duty of the driver, at such hours of the night as
the overseer may designate, to blow his horn, and go around and see
that every negro is at his proper place, and to report to the overseer
any that may be absent; and it shall be the duty of the overseer, at
some hour between that time and daybreak, to patrol the quarters
himself, and see that every negro is where he should be.
13. The negro children are to be taken, every morning, by their
mothers, and carried to the houses of the nurses; and every cabin
shall be kept locked during the day.
14. Sick negroes are to receive particular attention. When they
are first reported sick, they are to be examined by the overseer, and
prescribed for, and put under the care of the nurse, and not put to
work until the disease is broken and the patient beyond the power
of a relapse.
15. When the overseer shall consider it necessary to send for a
physician, he shall enter in the plantation book the number of visits,
and to what negro they are made.
16. When the negro shall die, an hour shall be set apart by the
overseer for his burial; and at that hour all business shall cease, and
every negro on the plantation, who is able to do so, shall attend the
burial.
17. The overseer shall keep a plantation book, in which he shall
register the birth and name of each negro that is born; the name of
each negro that died, and specify the disease that killed him. He
shall also keep in it the weights of the daily picking of each hand;
the mark, number, and weight of each bale of cotton, and the time of
sending the same to market; and all other such occurrences, relating
590 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
to the crop, the weather, and all other matters pertaining to the plan-
tation, that he may deem advisable.
1 8. The overseer shall pitch the crops, and work them according
to his own judgment, with the distinct understanding that a failure
to make a bountiful supply of corn and meat for the use of the planta-
tion, will be considered as notice that his services will not be required
for the succeeding year.
19. The negroes, teams, and tools are to be considered under the
overseer's exclusive management, and are not to be interfered with
by the employer, only so far as to see that the foregoing rules are
strictly observed.
20. The overseer shall, under no circumstances, create an account
against his employer, except in the employment of a physician, or in
the purchase of medicines; but whenever any thing is wanted about
the plantation, he shall apply to his employer for it.
21. Whenever the overseer, or his employer, shall become dis-
satisfied, they shall, in a frank and friendly manner, express the same,
and, if either party desires it, he shall have the right to settle and
separate.
C. Description of a Southern Rice Plantation^ 18 jg ^
The instructions given by planters to their overseers reveal, no doubt, the
brighter side of plantation life, for we may suppose that these instructions were
given with the view of insuring humane treatment for the slaves. Travelers were
almost unanimous in the opinion, however, that the slaves were often overworked
and mistreated.
We visited one of the rice plantations in the neighborhood of
Savannah, and saw the condition of the slaves on it with our own
eyes. The estate was considered to be a valuable one, and under a
fair condition of management, not among the best nor among the
worst, but just such an average plantation as we wish to examine.
The dwellings for the negroes were built of wood, ranged in rows of
great uniformity, raised a little above the ground, each building con-
taining two or more rooms, with a fire-place for two. We saw also
the nursery for the children, and the sick-room or hospital for those
who were hurt or diseased, and we had communication with the over-
seer, and several of the people, from both of whom we learnt the
following facts, as to their routine of labour, food, and treatment.
» The Slave SUUes of America. By J. S. Buckingham (London, Ci842])> If
132-4.
SLAVERY AND THE SOUTH 591
The slaves are all up by daylight; and every one who is able to
work, from eight or nine years old and upwards, repair to their several
departments of field-labour. They do not return to their houses
either to breakfast or dinner; but have their food cooked for them in
the field, by negroes appointed to that duty. They continue thus
at work till dark, and then return to their dwellings. There is no
holiday on Saturday afternoon, or any other time throughout the
year, except a day or two at Christmas; but from daylight to dark,
every day except Sunday, they are at their labour. Their allowance
of food consists of a peck, or two gallons, of Indian corn per week,
half that quantity for working boys and girls, and a quarter for little
children. This corn they are obliged to grind themselves, after
their hours of labour are over; and it is then boiled in water, and made
into hominey, but without anything to eat with it, neither bread,
rice, fish, meat, potatoes, or butter; boiled corn and water only, and
barely a sufficient quantity of this for subsistence.
Of clothes, the men and boys had a coarse woolen jacket and
trousers once a year, without shirt or any other garment. This was
their winter dress; their summer apparel consists of a similar suit of
jacket and trousers of the coarsest cotton cloth. Absence from
work, or neglect of duty, was punished with stinted allowance, im-
prisonment, and flogging. A medical man visited the plantation
occasionally, and medicines were administered by a negro woman
called the sick-nurse. No instruction was allowed to be given in
reading or writing, no games or recreations were provided, nor was
there indeed any time to enjoy them if they were. Their lot was one
of continued toil, from morning to night, uncheered even by the
hope of any change, or prospect of improvement in condition.
In appearance, all the negroes that we saw looked insufficiently
fed, most wretchedly clad, and miserably accommodated in their
dwellings; for though the exteriors of their cottages were neat and
uniform, being all placed in regular order and whitewashed, yet
nothing could be more dirty, gloomy, and wretched than their interiors;
and we agreed that the criminals in all the state prisons of the country,
that we had yet seen, were much better off in food, raiment, and
accommodation, and much less severely worked, than those men,
whose only crime was that they were of a darker colour than the race
that held them in bondage.
592 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
D. The System of Task Work, 1854 ^
In an effort to stimulate the slave to exert himself, many planters resorted to
the system of task work. By this system a task was assigned to each slave to be
finished within a certain time, with the understanding that any time the slave
might have after the task was finished, was his own to spend on his own plot of
ground. Mr. Olmsted, the best-known writer on conditions in the south just
prior to the outbreak of the Civil War, described this system as follows:
After passing through tool-rooms, corn-rooms, mule-stables, store-
rooms, and a large garden, in which vegetables to be distributed
among the negroes, as well as for the family, are grown, we walked
to the rice-land. It is divided by embankments into fields of about
twenty acres each, but varying somewhat in size, according to the
course of the river. The arrangements are such that each field may
be flooded independently of the rest, and they are subdivided by
open ditches into rectangular plats of a quarter acre each. We first
proceeded to where twenty or thirty women and girls were engaged
in raking together, in heaps and winrows, the stubble and rubbish
left on the field after the last crop, and burning it. The main object
of this operation is to kill all the seeds of weeds, or of rice, on the
ground. Ordinarily it is done by tasks — a certain number of the
small divisions of the field being given to each hand to burn in a day;
but owing to a more than usual amount of rain having fallen lately,
and some other causes, making the work harder in some places than
others, the women were now working by the day, under the direction
of a "driver," a negro man, who walked about among them, taking
care that they left nothing unburned. Mr. X. inspected the ground
they had gone over, to see whether the driver had done his dut\
It had been sufficiently well burned, but, not more than quarter
much ground had been gone over, he said, as was usually burned i
task-work, — and he thought they had been very lazy, and repi
manded them for it. The driver made some little apology, but tl
women offered no reply, keeping steadily, and it seemed sullenl\
on at their work.
In the next field, twenty men, or boys, for none of them looked ;
if they were full-grown, were plowing, each with a single mule, ai
a light, New- York-made plow. The soil was very friable, the plowii
easy, and the mules proceeded at a smart pace; the furrows wci
straight, regular, and well turned. Their task >yas nominally a
acre and a quarter a day; somewhat less actually, as the measm
*• A Journey in the Seaboard Slave States. By Frederick Law Olmsted (Nc
York, x8j9), 430-a,
SLAVERY AND THE SOUTH 593
includes the space occupied by the ditches, which are two to three
feet wide, running around each quarter of ' an acre. The plowing
gang was superintended by a driver who was provided with a watch;
and while we were looking at them he called out that it was twelve
o'clock. The mules were immediately taken from the plows, and the
plow-boys mounting them, leapt the ditches, and cantered off to the
stables, to feed them. One or two were ordered to take their plows
to the blacksmith, for repairs. . . .
The plowmen got their dinner at this time: those not using horses
do not usually dine till they have finished their tasks; but this, I
believe, is optional with them. They commence work at sunrise, and
at about eight o'clock have breakfast brought to them in the field,
each hand having left a bucket with the cook for that purpose.
All who are working in connection leave their work together, and
gather in a social company about a fire, where they generally spend
about half an hour at breakfast time. The provisions furnished
them consist mainly of meal, rice and vegetables, with salt and mo-
lasses, and occasionally bacon, fish, and coffee. The allowance is
a peck of meal, or an equivalent quantity of rice per week, to each
working hand, old or young, besides small stores. Mr. X. says that
he has lately given a less amount of meat than is now usual on planta-
tions, having observed that the general health of the negroes is not as
good as formerly, when no meat at all was customarily given them.
The general impression among planters is, that the negroes work
much better for being supplied with three or four pounds of bacon
a week.
The field-hands are all divided into four classes, according to their
physical capacities. The children beginning as "quarter-hands," ad-
vancing to "half -hands," and then to "three-quarter hands;" and,
finally, when mature, and able-bodied, healthy and strong, to "full
hands." As they decline in strength, from age, sickness, or other
cause, they retrograde in the scale, and proportionately less labor is
required of them. Many, of naturally weak frame, never are put
among the full hands. Finally, the aged are left out at the annual
classification, and no more regular field-work is required of them,
although they are generally provided with some light, sedentary
occupation. I saw one old woman picking "tailings" of' rice out
of a heap of chaff, an occupation at which she was literally not earn-
ing her salt. Mr. X. told me she was a native African, having been
brought when a girl from the Guinea coast. She spoke almost unin-
telligibly; but after some other conversation, in which I had not been
594 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
able to understand a word she said, he jokingly proposed to send her
back to Africa. She expressed her preference to remain where she
was, very emphatically. "Why?" She did not answer readily, but
being pressed, threw up her palsied hands, and said furiously, "I lubs
'ou mas'r, oh, I lubs 'ou. I don't want to go 'way from 'ou."
The field hands, are nearly always worked in gangs, the strength
of a gang varying according to the work that engages it; usually it
numbers twenty or more, and is directed by a driver. As on most
large plantations, whether of rice or cotton, in Eastern Georgia and
South Carolina, nearly all ordinary and regular work is performed by
tasks; that is to say, each hand has his labor for the day marked out
before him, and can take his own time to do it in. For instance,
in making drains in light, clean meadow land, each man or woman
of the full hands is required to dig one thousand cubic feet; in swamp-
land that is being prepared for rice culture, where there are not many
stumps, the task for a ditcher is five hundred feet: while in a very
strong cypress swamp, only two hundred feet is required; in hoeing
rice, a certain number of rows, equal to one-half or two-thirds of an
acre, according to the condition of the land; in sowing rice (strewing
in drills), two acres; in reaping rice (if it stands well), three-quarters of
an acre; or, sometimes a gang will be required to reap, tie in sheaves,
and carry to the stack-yard the produce of a certain area, commonly
equal to one-fourth the number of acres that there are hands working
together. Hoeing cotton, corn, or potatoes; one half to one acre.
Threshing; five to six hundred sheaves. In plowing rice-land (light,
clean, mellow soil) with a yoke of oxen, one acre a day, including
the ground lost in and near the drains — the oxen being changed
at noon. A cooper, also, for instance, is required to make barrels
at the rate of eighteen a week. Drawing staves; 500 a day. Hoop
poles; 120. Squaring timber; 100 ft. Laying worm-fence; 50
panels per hand. Post and rail do., posts set 2\ to 3 ft. deep, 9 ft.
apart, nine or ten panels per hand. In getting fuel from the woods,
(pine, to be cut and split,) one cord is the task for a day. In '' mauling
rails," the taskman selecting the trees (pine) that he judges will split
easiest, one hundred a day, ends not sharpened.
These are the tasks for first class able-bodied men, they are les-
sened by one quarter for three quarter hands, and proportionately
for the lighter classes. In alloting the tasks, the drivers are exi)ected
to put the weaker hands, where (if there is any choice in the appear-
ance of the ground, as where certain rows in hoeing corn would be less
weedy than others), they will be favoured. ...
SLAVERY AND THE SOUTH 595
IV. The Internal Slave Trade
The Movement of Slaves toward the Souths 1840-1860 ^
There has been a great deal of discussion about the magnitude of the internal
slave trade during the years preceding the Civil War. Some have contended that
slaves were bred in the border states for the markets of the lower-south. Others
have denied that such was the case. There is no doubt, however, that many slaves
were raised in Virginia and Kentucky and then 'sent to the gulf regions. In the
absence of definite statistics 6n the subject, the extent of this trade can never be
definitely known. The following is merely a well-founded opinion :
... It is this, the profit developed by trading in slaves, and
this alone, which has enabled slavery in the older slave states of
North America to survive the consequences of its own ravages. In
Maryland and Virginia, perhaps also in the Carolinas and Georgia,
free institutions would long since have taken the place of slavery,
were it not that just as the crisis of the system had arrived, the
domestic slave trade opened a door of escape from a position which
had become untenable. The conjuncture was peculiar, and would
doubtless by Southern theologians be called providential. The prog-
ress of devastation had reached the point at which slave cultivation
could no longer sustain itself — the contingency predicted by Roanoke,
when, instead of the slave running away from his master, the master
should run away from his slave. A considerable emigration of planters
had actually taken place, and the deserted fields were already receiv-
ing a new race of settlers from the regions of freedom. The long
night of slavery seemed to be passing away, and the dawn of a brighter
day to have arrived, when suddenly the auspicious movement was
arrested. A vast extension of the territory of the United States,
opening new soils to Southern enterprise, exactly coincided with the
prohibition of the external slave trade, and both fell in with the crisis
in the older states. The result was a sudden and remarkable rise in
the price of slaves. The problem of the planter's position was at
once solved, and the domestic slave trade commenced. Slavery had
robbed Virginia of the best riches of her soil, but she still had a noble
climate — a climate which would fit her admirably for being the breed-
ing place of the South. A division of labour between the old and
the new states took place. In the former the soil was extensively
exhausted, but the climate was salubrious; in the latter the climate
was unfavorable to human life spent in severe toil, but the soil was
teeming with riches. The old states, therefore, undertook the part
^ The Slave Power. By J. E. Cairnes (London and Cambridge, 1863), 124-31.
596 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
of breeding and rearing slaves till they attained to physical vigour,
and the new that of using up in the development of their virgin
resources the physical vigour which had been thus obtained.
The charge of breeding slaves for the market is one which the
citizens of Virginia, more especially when resident in Europe, are
apt indignantly to deny; and, in a certain sense, the denial may not
be wholly destitute of foundation. It is perhaps true that in no
particular instance is a slave brought into the world for the purpose,
distinctly conceived beforehand, of being sold to the South. Never-
theless it is absolutely certain that the whole business of raising slaves
in the Border states is carried on with reference to their price, and
that the price of slaves in the Border states is determined by the
demand for them in the Southern markets. "Nowhere," said Henry
Clay, "in the farming portion of the United States would slave labour
be generally employed, if the proprietors were not tempted to raise
slaves by the high price of the Southern markets which keeps it up
in their own." Of the truth of this remark an illustration was afforded
in 1829, when a law having been passed by the state legislature of
Louisiana interposing obstacles to the introduction of slaves into that
state, within two hours after this was known the price of slaves on the
breeding grounds of the North fell 25 per cent. Again, at a later
epoch, when the efforts of the Border slaveholders to establish slavery
in California had failed, what was the comment on this failure made by
a candidate for the governorship of Virginia, then on an electioneering
tour through the state? — that, but for this, the price of an able-
bodied negro would have risen to 5,000 dollars — in other words,
that the closing of the Californian mines to slave labour represented
a loss to that state of 4,000 dollars per head on every first class Vir-
ginian slave. Such is the aspect under which the extension of the
domain of slavery is regarded in Virginia — a point of view somewhat
hard to reconcile with the air of injured virtue assumed by the 'Old
Dominion ' in its repudiation of the internal slave trade.
Indeed it would be futile to deny — nor is it denied by the more
outspoken of the Southern politicians — that the markets of the
South form the main support of slavery in the older Slave States.
Of the e.xtent to which the trade is carried, and the important inter-
ests depending on it, some notion may be formed from its effects on
the census. For the [)urpose of exhibiting these I shall compare the
population returns of the three princii)al Border states, — Virginia,
Maryland and Kentucky, — with those of three working states in
the extreme south-west, — Arkansas, Mississii)j>i. and Louisiana.
SLAVERY AND THE SOUTH 597
Percentage Increase of Population in the Decade Ending 1850
Whites Slaves
Virginia 20.77 S-2i
Maryland 3i-34 0.70
Kentucky 28.99 iS-7S
Arkansas 110.16 136.26
Mississippi 65.13 58.74
Louisiana 61.23 45-32
It will be seen from the above that, while in the former group of
states the white population has progressed with, on the whole, toler-
able regularity, the slave population has, in two of them, scarcely
advanced at all, and in the third at a rate far short of that attained
by the white population. On the other hand, in the latter group —
a group composed of states in which it is perfectly notorious that
plantation labour is far severer than in the former — the slave popu-
lation has in one instance increased with much greater rapidity than
the whites, and in another at almost the same rate. Even in Louisiana
the increase of the slave population has not fallen greatly behind that
of the whites, although the circumstances of that state might well
lead us to expect this result, being, as it is, the seat of a great com-
mercial city with a large and rapidly growing white population, and
its prevailing industry — the cultivation of sugar — being, as is well
known, enormously destructive of slave life.
.^^
CHAPTER XVIII
DEVELOPMENT OF AGRICULTURE, 1860-1915
I. Foreign Trade in Agricultural Products
Extent and Character, i8y8-igi2^
Agriculture furnishes by far the greater share of the country's exports. The
extent of this trade herewith is indicated in a Report of the Department of
Agriculture as follows:
HIGH VALUE OF NATIONAL SURPLUS
Over a billion dollars is, for the fourth time, the value of the ex-
ports of farm products. It is sufficient to pay the expenses of the
National Government. As long ago as 1878 the value of agricultural
exports reached half a billion dollars; by 1892 the amount had touched
$800,000,000; and by 1901 it had grown to $950,000,000. The
billion-dollar mark was reached in 1907, when the value of agricul-
tural exports amounted to $1,054,000,000. That amount has not
since been equaled, but the exports of 1908 and 191 1 exceeded a
billion dollars in value, and in 191 2 the amount fell short of the record
exports by only $4,000,000.
RISING QUANTITY OF EXPORTS
The high value is not entirely due to high prices. The trend of
the quantity of the exports of particular commodities can best be
understood by using index numbers. Let the quantities of the
average yearly exports of the 10 years 1900 to 1909 be represented
by 100 and convert the quantities of the exports of other groups of
years and of individual years into terms related to that basis. It
will then appear that the e.xports of oleo oil have increased year by
year after the period of 1900 to 1909 to the relative amount of 11 2.3
in 191 2. This commodity was exported this year to the value of
$13,000,000.
* Annual Report of the Department of Agriculture, igj2 (Washington, 1913),
22-4. I
DEVELOPMENT OF AGRICULTURE 599
Lard compounds also have increased above the average of the
period 1900 to 1909, the relative number for 191 2 being 114.8. The
exports of this commodity are this year as high as $5,000,000. Vari-
ous animal oils, not specifically described, have increased in exports
during the last three years. Another commodity that is increasing
in exports is eggs, which have arisen to the relative number 359.8 in
comparison with 100 as representing the 10 years 1900 to 1909. In
191 2 the value of these exports amounted to $3,400,000. The exports
of mutton amount to only a few hundred thousand dollars in value,
but they are increasing, and the relative number for 191 2 is 283.1 in
comparison with 1900 to 1909.
The exports of cured pork hams declined in 1910 and 191 1 to about
three-quarters of the average from 1900 to 1909, but in 191 2 the ex-
ports were very nearly restored to the former amount. Lard is
another commodity that has been climbing back to former importance
as an exported commodity, and the quantity exported in 191 2 is
indicated by 8S.8. if the exports of pork and of all of its products
are consolidated, it will appear that they are rapidly returning to the
average exports of 1900 and 1909.
Cotton is the great mainstay of the export trade. Marked in-
crease in exports is conspicuous. Compared with the average exports
of 1900 to 1909 represented by 100, the exports of 1890 to 1899 were
79.7; the exports of 1910 were 85.7; in 191 1 they were 107.8; and
in 191 2 the relative number is 147.9.
Apples are supporting an increased export trade, which now
amounts to about $10,000,000. The export trade in dried apples is
steadily increasing, and in comparison with the average of 1900 to
1909, the exports of 191 2 are represented by 159. For fresh apples
the exports of 191 2 are represented by 124.1. Prunes are a fruit
that has reversed the tide of international trade. Its exports now
amount to several million dollars a year, and are increasing. During
the last three years the exports of this fruit were nearly double the
average of the period 1900 to 1909. Raisins have done better yet,
and now amount to about four times the average exports of the
period mentioned. Their value is more than a million dollars. Glu-
cose and grape sugar, with exports amounting to several million dol-
lars a year, are contributing to the foreign trade annual quantities
above the average of the lo-year period mentioned.
To the list of commodities whose exports are increasing and are
above the average of the 10 years, 1900 to 1909, or very close to that
average, may be added hops, corn-oil cake, cotton-seed oil cake and
6oo READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
oil-cake meal, flaxseed oil cake and oil-cake meal, cotton-seed oil,
linseed oil, rice, cotton seed, tobacco; and the four vegetables, bean-
pease, onions, and potatoes.
The foregoing would be quite a respectable list even though cot
ton were omitted. Beef and its products have gone into a sorry de-
cline in the export trade, but wheat flour still maintains a high relative
showing, as is indicated by 71.2 in comparison with the annual average
of the 10 years, 1900 to 1909, and has steadily increased in exports
during the last three years. The exports of wheat, including flour
converted to wheat, amounted to 80,000,000 bushels in 191 2.
The general fact, however, is that the packing-house products
have declined in value of exports since 1906, when they reached
their highest value, $208,000,000, and have declined still more in
quantity because of the increasing prices, yet the value of packing-
house exports has increased since 1910 and reached the amount of
$164,000,000 in 191 2. So with grain and grain products, the quan-
tity in the aggregate is diminishing as well as the value, and the high
export values of five and six years ago have not since been equaled.
In 191 2 the export group known as grain and grain products had a
value of $123,000,000.
IMPORTS
Agricultural imports are steadily increasing in value, subject to
some fluctuations. They reached their highest value in 191 2, when
they amounted to $784,000,000. This was an increase of about
$100,000,000 over 191 1 and 1910, the years of highest import values
preceding 191 2. Notable increases are found in the imports of coffee,
sugar and molasses, tobacco, wool, and packing-house products, in
which hides and skins are very prominent.
LARGE BALANCE OF TRADE MAINTAINED
It is apparent that since 1908 the balance in the foreign trade
in agricultural products has not kept up to its former figure, but, as
has already been said, this is not because of diminished export values,
but is due to a greater Jn^rgase of imports than exports. Notwith-
standing this, the balance in favor of exports of farm products was
as high as $278,000,000 in 191 2, and this was higher than the amount
for 1 910 and also for 1909.
At no time before 191 2 have farm products been hard pushed,
nor, indeed, closely approached, by products other than agricultural
ones in contribution to the balance of trade in favor of all exports.
DEVELOPMENT OF AGRICULTURE 6oi
It was not until 1898 that products other than agricultural had a
balance in favor of exports, but twice since that time — in 1903 and
1 910 — the balance was in favor of exports. The balance in favor
of the exports of these commodities was only $5,000,000 below the
agricultural balance in 191 2.
FOREST PRODUCTS
Forest products were exported in 191 2 to the value of $108,000,000,
and this was greater than the amount for any preceding year. This
is partly due to high prices, yet there were increases in the quantities
of the exports of boards, shooks, rosin, and turpentine.
The imports, as well as the exports, of forest products exhibited
a marked tendency to increase in value in recent years, and during
these years the imports have very much exceeded the exports in value.
In 191 2 the imports of forest products were valued at $173,000,000,
or $58,000,000 more than the foreign and domestic exports.
II. Land Tenure in the United States
A. Land Tenure in 1880 ^
One of the marked differences between farming in the United States and farm-
ing in Europe has been the manner of holding lands. In this country land has been
not only easijy acquired, but also easily transferred. The advantages of this system
over the tenancy system in Europe is given in the Tenth Census as follows:
The methods of agriculture in any country are, of necessity, based
upon its system of land tenure. Local systems of land-ownership
and land-holding, and even traditional customs not compelled by
statute law, but which become a sort of unwritten law, are not easily
changed, even if very faulty; but when changed agriculture adapts
itself to the new conditions with comparative ease, although usually not
quickly. Fortunately for us feudalism never existed here, and has
not, therefore, left its evil influence on our land laws, or on the senti-
ments and traditions connected with agriculture, or on the political
and social life of either land-owners or farm laborers. Our homestead
and pre-emption laws have made it possible for each man to become
a land-owner upon actual occupation and settlement, and our land
laws secure to the proprietor perfect title, absolute ownership, com-
plete control and easy sale or transfer. Land has here neither social
nor political value, but merely its agricultural value, and it is placed
^ Tenth Census, 18S0, Report On the Productions of Agriculture (Washing-
ton, 1883), 523-5.
6o2 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
as nearly as is possible on a level with other property as to titk
ownership, transfer, in the burdens it bears and the privileges it
confers.
This simplicity of tenure and the abundance of cheap or new land
have made it possible for every able-bodied man of average capacity
to satisfy that desire which has become instinctive in our race and
own a home. A natural result is that in the grain-growing district
the great majority of farmers own the land they till, and that as the
population becomes more dense the improved lands become more
divided and the average size of the holdings is smaller. We see this
going on in every state. The effect of this diminution in the average
size of the farms upon agricultural production is not as simple as might
at first seem, and, owing to the special conditions, the evils resulting
from extreme subdivision in some portions of the Old World do not
exist here, where the subdivision has nowhere reached any such
figures as it has there. At the census of 1870 the least average size
of the farms in the chief grain-growing states was over 100 acres,
while the arguments that are so often quoted against subdivision
in the Old World apply mostly to farms of from 2 to 15 acres. In
all of the states growing much grain a farm of 50 acres, or even one of
80 acres, is called a "small farm." The cases of France and Ireland
are most frequently cited as showing the evil effects of extreme sub-
division in the Old World, but neither case is at all parallel with ours.
In both countries the land is tilled by a peasantry, and the subdivision
there is much greater than here. The French people own their land,
and the country is, as a consequence, a highly productive one. The
scale of farming is low, the animals are usually of poor breeds, but
the crops are good and of excellent quality. It is in the production
of domestic animals and in the use of labor-saving machinery that
small farming stands at the greatest disadvantage. In America
there is no peasantry, and, moreover, there is no distinction of class
among land-owners. The small owner is socially equal to the large
owner, the only difference being that which comes from a difference
of wealth, which is vastly less in the country between large and
small farmers than in the cities between men doing a large business
and those doing a small business. In France the small farmers are
peasants, in Ireland not only peasants but tenants, and in both cases
Without either the aspirations or the incentives which a small American
farmer has. The difference of previous history, local traditions, arid
social customs is so great that no parallel can be drawn.
The difference in the density of population also regulates the in-
DEVELOPMENT OF AGRICULTURE 603
tensity of the farming. Where the population is very dense, and
must be fed from the soil, there farming must be intense, no matter
how much it costs, or the people will starve. In this country the
abundance of new land, and the ease with which it may be acquired,
has prevented an intense farming. It is this, and not a lack of either
intelligence or of enterprise, that gives us a low average yield of grain
per acre, compared with that of the more densely populated agricul-
tural districts of Europe. Wherever it pays to farm more intensely
American farmers are not slow to see it, but it is curious to see how
many who discuss this matter entirely ignore the great natural law
that as the methods of farming become more and more intense the
increase of crop is not proportionate to the increase of cost in
producing it.
A given soil will easily produce a certain average of crop with a
certain amount of labor and expense. We may increase the labor
and expense, and for a time get a more than corresponding increase
of crop. If we continue in the same direction, we soon reach a
point beyond which the increase in yield is. not proportionate to the
increase in expense, but grows less and less, and at last a point is
reached beyond which no amount of additional expense will increase
the average yield. In short, there is no limit to the expense that
may be applied to the production: there is a limit to the
average yield, and even to the possible yield, and the ratio of cost
to production varies all along the Une. We have our droughts and
our mishaps, but our less intense system of agriculture, under our
system of land tenure, is more flexible, and can stand shocks another
system might not sustain.
The agriculture of the United Kingdom is just now of especial
interest to us, because of the contrast it presents with ours, the agri-
cultural distress now existing there, and also because they are so
largely our customers and feel so keenly our competition.
The system of land tenure, the density of population, and the
social and political factors involved, slowly brought English agricul-
ture up to an intensity which could not stand the pressure of the
recent bad years. It had too many fixed points in it to meet the
emergency and stand the strain while adjusting itself to new condi-
tions. Land had acquired a value it could not hold — no new thing
of late years.
A similar thing has happened in some localities in New England,
where many farms have fallen in value at some time during the past
thirty years as much as in the worst cases in England, the result being
6o4 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
due largely to western competition. But here the land-owner and
the farmer are one and the same person, and as the causes were
working gradually the value of the land and the cost of production
imperceptibly readjusted themselves to each other. This new adapta-
tion went on slowly by a perfectly natural process, guided only by the
laws of production and of markets. There was decreased profit
during the change, but no "distress," and practically no bankruptcy.
The system of land tenure made it possible and easy for any one
dissatisfied with the condition to sell out, if he chose, at any time on
the best terms that offered and "go West," if he wished, before bank-
ruptcy befell him, and give way to some one else who could and
would utilize such advantages as the old place afforded. All this
was a purely economic problem for each one to work out for himself.
There were not two or three antagonistic classes in interest involved
on each farm, each increasing the actual loss by trying to crowd so
much of it as possible on the other, and there were no social or political
factors involved. In places the actual effects have been so great
that lands once tilled have been turned back again into woodlands,
and the population of numerous farming towns has actually decreased;
but this has gone on without either social or political disturbance,
the laws of adaptation pertaining to this industry have been free to
act, and the problem quietly solves itself.
But in countries where farmers, as a rule, must rent the land,
and two different classes, economically and socially, are involved,
whose interests are antagonistic, the farmer feels the pressure first,
because he has not perfect freedom to adapt his methods and his
production to varying conditions as rapidly as the conditions them-
selves vary. The agriculture of those countries will adapt itself to
the new condition of things in time, because, as already shown, the
industry itself will not and cannot be killed. It will shape itself
anew, in conformity with the new pressure exerted upon it, but so
long as the present difference of system of land tenure prevails that
now exists the agriculture competition of the Mississippi basin must
produce very different effects in the United Kingdom, France, and
Germany from those produced in the parts of the United States
which suffer from the same competition. The farmer working lands
belonging to another, by methods and under a system which has
regard to another's interest even more than to his own, and on a
scale of intensity fixed in previous years and under other economic
conditions, without that absolute freedom to manage and control
his own business in such ways as his own judgment suggests or his
DEVELOPMENT OF AGRICULTURE 605
own tastes prompt, must work at a disadvantage in competition
with another farmer who has this freedom.
Fixity of tenure, the right to hold possession so long as the pecuni-
ary aHlItty' oF the taste of the possessor determines, and the freedom
to sell at the best advantage when he will and to whom he will, is
another element the political and social effect of which are probably
even greater than the economical ones. If insecurity of tenure be
combined with great subdivisions of land, then we see the worst
effects, of which Ireland is a conspicuous example. . . .
The economic phase of our system of land ownership which most
directly and immediately affects grain production, the one which has
been so much dwelt upon, is the perfect freedom the system gives
the American farmer to adapt his methods to suit his own special
conditions and to specialize his productions as best suit his own
tastes. . , .
The relation which this industry bears to the political system of
the country is no less important than the immediately economical
ones, for agriculture and land tenure bear peculiar and special rela-
tions to social progress and political stability. From the nature of
the vocation its problems must always be specially related to political
problems and its progress to poHtical progress.
B. Farm Tenancy in the South, IQ02 ^
Considerable attention has been directed to farm tenancy, particularly in
the south. There greater changes have occurred than in the north, owing^to a
change in the character of the workmen. The large plantations of ante-bellum
days have been broken up, and in the place of slaves directecLby^overseers there
now stands a large group of freejiegro_ieiiajlt:farmei:s^ The status of tenant-"
farmers in that region has been described as foUowsT '
It is stated, on apparently good authority, that in the cotton
counties around Dallas, Waco, and the bottoms of the Brazos River,
Texas, 75 per cent of the best cotton land is owned by men who live
in large towns, and is farmed by a poor and shiftless class of whites
and negroes who, under the strict and unceasing supervision of the
owner, or his agent, generally make for the owner a handsome profit
upon the present valuation. The cotton planter with, say, 2,000
acres of fertile land divides it into tracts varying from 50 to 100 acres
each. Each tract is fenced and improved to the extent of a house,
barn, and corncrib. This tract is leased for a year, beginning with
^ Final Report of the Industrial Commission. (Washington, 1902), Volume
XIX of the Commission's Report, 97-9.
6o6 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
January i. Although the planters prefer that the tenants should
furnish their own stock, implements, and seed, it is difficult to find
renters who are sufficiently well equipped or have enough capital to
take the land on such terms. In nearly every case the landlord is
expected to furnish everything, including food and clothing for the
family, until such time as the crop is harvested and sold.
The system of overseeing by the agent of the landowner is usually
such as to enforce the rights of the owners in keeping the stock and
implements from abuse or neglect. Nevertheless, this system of
absenteeism has the seeds of economic self-destruction in it. A sys-
tem of supervision does not develop but destroys efficiency on the
part of the tenant. The general disposition is to lay everything to
the shiftlessness of the renters. On the other hand, it is stated by
one of the leading planters in McLennan County, Tex., that a prop-
erly conducted cotton farm in the neighborhood of Waco will pay
from 30 to 50 per cent upon its valuation. This, however, requires
the strictest attention to detail and very strict handling of the people
who till the soil. He states that of about i ,300 farmers in McLennan
County over 1,200 are tenant farmers. There is a general tendency
on the part of landlords to increase the size of their holdings, and the
men who already have the land and money are more apt to absorb
adjacent tracts than they are to allow the tenant to buy land. The
German farmers in this portion of the country appear to be prosper-
ous, and are noted for remaining a much longer time on the same
farm as renters, usually several years elapsing before a change is made.
One German tenant is cited who rented the same piece of ground
from the same landlord for 13 years, and left him because the land-
lord would not sell him the farm which he had cultivated and in
which he desired to put his savings. It appears, therefore, that it
is sometimes difficult for renters to obtain land, even when they have
the means to pay for it.
When the planter, in many parts of the Southern States, leases his
ground and furnishes nothing to make a crop, he receives one-third
or one-fourth of the crop. Cash rental is the exception rather than
the rule. Where the planter furnishes the live stock, implements,
and supplies, he gets one-half of the cotton and one-half of the corn,
and deducts from the renter's share of the crop money an amount
sufficient to pay li})eral prices for all supplies furnished and liberal
interest on the money. The result of this system is that the renters
rarely ever succeed in laying by a surplus. On the contrary, their
experiences are so discouraging that they seldom remain on the same
DEVELOPMENT OF AGRICULTURE 607
farm for more than a year. They are not only unable to lay by any
money, but their children remain uneducated and half clothed. The
system is apparently one of the most undesirable, so far as its effect
on the community is concerned, without, of course, implying any
questionable motive to the owner of the land. The landowner him-
self is not necessarily at fault. He is obliged to be liberal in furnish-
ing supplies and stock to the tenant, whose manner of using these
resources may be the most wasteful. During unfavorable years, the
profit may wholly disappear or leave a deficit in his account, so that
during favorable years it is necessary to make good the loss.
Thejtenant system or crop-sharing system, which seems to be the
prevailing feature of land tenure throughout the cotton belt, is not
regarded as an advantageous arrangement between the tenants and
landlords, but, on the contrary, would be gladly gotten rid of for a
better system if the conditions permitted it. Where the tenant
system prevails, the tenant is furnished with a house, water, fuel,
pasturage for his stock, a share of the fruit on the place, a garden,
a shelter for stock, and storage for crops. The crop is in some cases
divided as follows: One-fourth of the cotton, one- third of the corn,
and one-half of the small grain goes to the landlord, the balance to
the tenant, the landlord furnishing the land and stock and his share
of the fertilizers. Under this system the crop, to a great extent,
and the land, generally, are apt to be neglected. The tenant is desir-
ous of expending as little labor as possible and the landlord of getting
the largest crop return. The permanent value of the land is apt
to be sacrificed for lack of competent supervision, and deterioration
of the property in general is quite certain to grow at a more rapid
rate than under a different system of occupancy. The renter has
little or no interest in the maintenance of permanent improvements.
This is especially true where the contract is made for a year at a time,
admitting of frequent changes of tenants and enabling them to evade
the responsibilities of careful management and methods of cultivation.
Consequently both the permanent improvements and the quality of
the soil deteriorate under this system. The tenant is, furthermore,
at a disadvantage in exchanging his crop for family supplies. He
sells his corn at the lowest price to the country merchant from whom
he gets his provisions in exchange, paying the highest price the country
merchant sees fit to demand. This same corn which is sold early in
the fall may have to be bought back from the country merchant by
the tenant late in the winter at from 50 to 100 per cent advance. The
economic effects of such a system are to the disadvantage of the
6o8
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
tenant in both transactions, both as a producer and a consumer, and
no system of such a character has in the history of agriculture ever
led, if uncorrected, to anything but failure.
III. Agriculture and Labor
A. Workers in Agriculture^ 1850-igio ^
Although the number of persons engaged in agriculture increased almost six-
fold during the period 1850-1910, the relative number decreased. In 1850 almost
one-half the f>ersons engaged in gainful occupations were on the farms, while in
1910 less than one-third of them were so engaged.
Population
Number of
Persons in all
Pursuits
Number of
Persons in
Agricultural
(a)
Percentage of
Census
Year
Total
Popula-
tion
Occupied
Occupied
Popula-
tion in
Agricul-
ture
1850
i86o
1870
1880
1890
1900
1910
23,191,876
31,443,321
38,558,371
50,155,783
62,947,714
75,994,575
91,972,266
5,371,876 (b)
8,287,043 (c)
12,505,923 (d)
17,392,099 (d)
22,735,661 (d)
29,073,233 (d)
38,167,336 (d)
2,406,731
3,343,328
5,922,335
7,669,432
8,463,365
10,268,138
12,373,159
23.2
26.4
32.4
34-7
36.1
38.3
41-5
44.8
40.4
47.4
44-1
37.2
35-3
32.4
(a) Exclusive of lumbermen, raftsmen, woodchoppers, apiarists, fishermen,
oystermen, foresters, owners and managers of log and timber camps, and those
engaged in other agricultural and annual husbandry pursuits, so far as sepa-
rately reported. (6) Free males over fifteen years of age. {c) Free males and
females over fifteen years of age. (</) Males and females over ten years of age.
B. Foreigners in American Agriculture, i8gg ^
Contrary to popular opinion many of what are usually called the " later
immigrants" have gone into agriculture. The character and extent of this
movement is indicated in the following extract:
The overflow of foreign-born population in the cities has turned
attention recently to the cultivation of land as a field for immigrants
* Adapted from the Census Reports, 1850-1910, by Dr. Charles L. Stewart, of
the University of Illinois.
» Final Report of the Industrial Commission (Washington, 1902), Volume
XIX of the Commission's Report, 49-54.
DEVELOPMENT OF AGRICULTURE 609
to the United States. Among the most successful nationalities are
the Italians. Most of them, in southern Italy especially, have been
trained in the methods of intensive agriculture. One drawback
hitherto has been the absence of any village system of living on the
part of the rural population of the United States, such as characterizes
agricultural society in Italy, Hungary, and through many portions
of Germany and France. Where systematic efforts have been made
under the colonizing principle, many communities of farmers have
been established in the United States. Among these may be noted,
first, the Italian colony at Vineland, N. J. These foreigners brought
with them the knowledge of grape culture and wine manufacture;
but afterwards, finding that truck farming and the cultivation of sweet
potatoes were more profitable, the grape industry became a less im-
portant feature of the colony's activity.
Another colony of the same nationality, comprising about 500
persons, has flourished in Brazos County, Tex. There the industry
is rice and truck farming. Throughout Texas there are many Italian
cotton planters, as well as grape growers. In the Brazos County
colony the inducement of cheap land was the cause of locating after
the immigrants had finished work upon a local branch of a railroad,
for the grading of which they had been imported. At Asti a colony
of that name, on the cooperative plan, has been in very successful
operation for fully 16 years. It is reported in the Italian Chamber of
Commerce at San Francisco, that, of the 45,625 Italians living in 56
counties of California, almost all were engaged in agriculture; they
owned 2,726 farm properties. In the vicinity of Denver and Pueblo,
Colo., Salt Lake City, Utah, and Cheyenne, Wyo., truck farming
has been quite generally in the hands of Italians. Likewise in the
vicinity of New Orleans and at Memphis, Tenn., where there are 50
Italian truck farmers who emigrated from the valley of the Po, in
northern Italy, and at Daphne, Baldwin County, Ala., there are
regularly established sections or communities of foreigners engaged in
agriculture. As a rule, the Italians take small tracts of land, and pre-
fer to remain in close contact with neighbors of their own nationality.
There are very few Italian farmers in the New England States.
Bohemians, though a rural people in Europe, have less frequently
taken to the cultivation of the soil in the United States. The reasons
assigned are, first, inadequate capital; second, cost of travel from the
seaports to the interior, and, equally, the lonesomeness of farm life in
comparison with the village life to which they have been accustomed
in Bohemia. Bohemian farmers in individual households have,
6io READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
however, been very prosperous in Ohio, Nebraska, Texas, and Wis-
consin. They rarely come as farm laborers, but are prepared to buy
land and develop it. A Finnish colony has been located in Hick-
man County, Tenn., with satisfactory results.
Attempts at inducing the Jewish portion of the foreign population
to engage in agriculture have not been generally successful. The
most favorable example is that at Woodbine, in the southern portion
of New Jersey, below Camden. Difficulties of clearing land, unsuit-
able soil for certain crops, the lack of capital, and absence of markets
here made themselves felt, until it was found necessary to supplement
agriculture by the smaller manufactures, at which the population
might occupy itself. At the present time 40 per cent of the 1,400
people at Woodbine are engaged in agriculture and 60 per cent in other
pursuits. Russo- Jewish farmers in Connecticut have been especially
successful, first, because of their taking farms already in a fair state of
cultivation, and second, because of the favorable markets within easy
reach. Likewise Jewish farmers have succeeded in the vicinity of
New Brunswick, New Jersey, and other locaUties and adjacent cities
clustered around the mouth of the Hudson.
In the several States foreign whites have made different degrees
of progress and contributed variously to the agricultural development
of the United States. A thriving colony of Swedes is established in
a new township called New Sweden, in Aroostook County, Me. This
started with 50 colonists directly from Sweden in 1870, and the com-
munity now numbers about 1,500 people of the most estimable char-
acter, residing in several townships of this county. Maine also has
one or more small colonies of Finns, and a colony of Jews. In New
Hampshire the advertisement of the 32,000 so-called abandoned farms
in 1890 led to the arrival of a number of foreigners who became farm
owners. In Cheshire County, Polish labor is the main reliance.
There are also some French Canadians. Vermont is represented by
Canadian French, Swedes, Norwegians, and Poles, especially during
haying and harvesting. Scandinavian labor usually comes from
Sweden and Norway direct. Laborers are engaged through employ-
ment agencies at the immigration station, in some cases by groups
of farmers who divide them up among themselves in the busy seasons.
In Massachusetts the Poles have come in very rapidly in the past
ten years, especially in the Connecticut Valley. In the market
gardens around Boston many French Canadians are employed. In
the Cap>e section Portuguese are abandoning fishing and going onto
the farms. In Rhorle Island conditions are somewhat similar to
DEVELOPMENT OF AGRICULTURE 6ii
those in eastern Massachusetts. In Connecticut the Irish of the
second generation are farm owners, and the ItaUans, Swedes, and
Poles perform field labor very satisfactorily. As a rule the Irish
and Germans are among the independent farmers. In New York
German and Dutch labor is quite common, while Poles, Swedes,
Russians, and Hungarians are scattered in different sections. In New
Jersey foreign farmers are mainly, as in Connecticut, Irish and German,
while Italians are, as mentioned above, of increasing importance. In
Pennsylvania the foreign population in agriculture is mainly German,
but in the coal regions Poles, Irish, and Italians are gradually becoming
a more important element in agriculture. In Ohio the prevailing
foreign element is still German, especially in southern Ohio, and a
high standard of educational attainment is frequently found among
them.
In Indiana German farmers are noted in the southern counties,
though there are few of this nationality in northern Indiana. For-
eign farm laborers through central Illinois are usually Germans,
Danes, and Swedes of a highly intelligent class. In Michigan there
are many colonies of foreigners. Among them are to be noted the
Dutch, Finns, Danes, and Norwegians. Germans are scattered over
the State in smaller groups, and there are many French Canadians
who came in originally as lumbermen. The sugar-beet industry has
led to the arrival of Germans, Polanders, and Russians, who prove
themselves most efficient. In Wisconsin Germans and Scandinavians
have proved more successful than the American born as farmers.
Most of the foreigners are Germans and Norwegians. Land companies
have been quick to recognize this and have made special offers to
induce immigration,
Polish people have been settled in the northern counties of Michi-
gan under land-company auspices. These people have been brought
principally from Indiana and the mining regions of Illinois and Penn-
sylvania. Another land company at work in settling the land in
northern Wisconsin has sent 71 families into a single county, most of
which were gathered from Western towns and the coal regions of
Pennsylvania. Wisconsin, it is said, probably contains a greater
variety of foreign groups than any other American State. Many of
these groups occupy whole townships and control the entire social
policy of these communities. The Germans, for example, number
75 per cent of the population of Taylor County, 65 per cent of Dodge
County, and 55 per cent of Buffalo County. The Bohemians consti-
tute three-sevenths of the population of Kewaunee County.
6i2 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
In Minnesota German farmers and farm laborers have been found
to be most effective, but the various European nationalities are widely
distributed, though not so numerously as in Wisconsin. Missouri
includes among its foreign farmers Germans, Irish, Scandinavians,
and French, representatives of which are found in many counties.
In North Dakota foreign farmers are to be found in every agricultural
county, representing as many as fourteen or fifteen different nation-
alities. In South Dakota conditions are very similar, especially in
the northwestern part of the State. Foreign farmers and farm laborers
are found everywhere in Kansas, Germans being most in evidence and
Swedes next in order. In Ellis county it is said that more than one-
half are foreigners, most of whom are Russians. A very large pro-
portion of the land sales of the Union Pacific Railroad in this State
was made to English, Swedish, Germans, and Russians.
Nebraska shows a variety of highly prosperous foreign farmers.
The railroad companies sold largely to Germans, Swedes, Bohemians,
and Russian Germans. The sugar-beet companies and the cattle
companies employ large numbers of foreigners. In the Southern
States the superabundance of cheap, unskilled labor has militated
against the foreigners getting a foothold in agriculture. This is
probably one main reason, if not the chief reason, for the failure of
foreign whites to seek agricultural opportunities in the South. Fur-
thermore, the absence of cash payment for wages is another drawback.
Delaware furnishes an instance of many Germans who began as farm
laborers, but are now independent farmers. While negro labor is
principally employed, Germans and Swedes and other foreigners are
frequently preferred, but are not to be had in sufficient numbers.
In Maryland special efforts have been made to induce forei;.''
whites to take up land. As a result of this policy many famiHes (
Germans, Dutch, and Swedes have settled there. Many who cann
as laborers in a few years acquired land of their own, and are no
prosperous farmers. In Virginia some Germans and English farmti
have settled in Albemarle County, which is a well-known fruit section
Italians are found in large trucking districts near Norfolk. Germai
colonists have been successfully engaged in agriculture at Ridg(
way, N.C., for the past seventeen years. A colony of some 40 fami
lies, which settled near Morgan ton, in the western part of that State
has, after many struggles, attained to a highly creditable degree ol
prosperity. In Mississippi foreign farmers are mainly Germans and
Swedes, with a few Irish. In Louisiana German farmers are crediti <
with having first cultivated rice for commercial purposes. In some oi
DEVELOPMENT OF AGRICULTURE 613
the southern parishes there are Germans, ItaUans, and Swedes engaged
in farming, and ItaHans are numerous as farm laborers on large sugar
plantations, to which they come annually during the busy -season, both
from Europe and from different parts of the United States.
la Texas the colonists located at Brunfels are especially remark-
able in their influence over agriculture, inasmuch as in their methods
of cultivation they have avoided the exhaustive system of farming and
maintained the fertility of the soil as the fundamental principle of
their farm policy. Much of the expansion in the trucking industry
in the vicinity of San Antonio is due to these farmers. In Arkansas
German farmers rank as first class. They have to be credited here
with great skill as gardeners, truck farmers, and in diversified farming
generally.
In Colorado Italians appear to be taking the lead in truck gardening
in the vicinity of cities. In Arizona there are many Scandinavian
farmers of considerable wealth. In Utah small farms, the feature of
the State's agriculture, are owned by families that cultivate them.
Many of these properties are in possession of English, German, Scan-
dinavian, Swiss, and Dutch farmers, and here again the Italian truck
I farmers are prominent in the vicinity of the leading cities of the State.
In Oregon in certain localities two-thirds of the farmers are Germans,
though other nationalities, such as Scandinavians, Swiss, Dutch,
Enghsh, Scotch, and Irish, are to be found. Many who started
; poor are now independent. Farm labor is mostly foreign. In Cali-
fornia Germans and Swedes are found widely distributed. In
Eldorado County, Cal., foreign farmers are mostly Portuguese and
engaged in fruit growing.
IV. Progress in Agriculture
A. Land Values, Equipment, and Number of Farms, 1850-1900 ^
The half-century from 1850 to 1900 was one of rapid agricultural expansion.
During that time miUions of~acres of wild lands were brought under cultivation,
agricultural implements were improved, and markets brought closer together by
improved means of transportation.
The census of agriculture of 1850 reported 1,449,073 farms, and
that of 1900, 5,739,657, an addition in fifty years of 4,290,584 farms,
or nearly three times as many as had been established in the preceding
two hundred and fifty years of settlement. The same period wit-
^ Twelfth Census, igoo. Agriculture (Washington, 1902), V, xvi, xviii-xix,
xxi, xxiv-xxv, xxvii-xxxi.
6i4 READINGS IN FXONOMIC HISTORY
nessed an increase in national population from 23,191,876 to 76,303,-
387, and in that of cities with 8,000 inhabitants and over, from
2,897,586 to^5,o3i,505. Notwithstanding this unprecedented growth
in urban population, the increase in the number of farms was relatively
greater than that in population, being in the ratio of 4 to ^.^. In
1850 there was i farm for every 16 persons in the United States; in
1900 there was i for every 13.3 persons. In proportion to population,
therefore, there were 6 farms in 1900 where there were only 5 in 1850,
representing an addition of i farm for every 12.4 persons added to the
national population.
If only the population outside of cities with 8,000 inhabitants and
over be considered, the following figures are obtained: In 1850 there
was I farm for every 14 of the 20,294,290 persons composing this
population, while in 1900, when the corresponding population was
51,271,882, there was i farm for every 8.9 persons. In proportion
to the nonurban population, there were 7 farms in 1900 where there
were only 4 in 1850, representing the establishment of i farm for
every 7.2 persons addfd to the population outside of cities of 8,000
inhabitants and over Compared with the nonurban population
there were nearly twice as many farms established during these fifty
years as in the period between the settlement of Jamestown and the
middle of the Nineteenth century. This large actual and relative
increase in the number of farms since 1850 is a fact of great social
importance, and is reflected in all the statistics of agriculture. . . .
The North Atlantic states, with the exception of Maine and Rhode
Island, reported more farms in 1900 than ten years before. The
gain in New Jersey was 12.4 per cent; in Massachusetts, 9.7 per cent;
in Pennsylvania, 6.0 per cent; in Connecticut, 2.3 per cent; in Ver-
mont, 1.6 per cent; in New Hampshire, 0.6 per cent; and in New
York, 0.2 p>er cent. The number of all farms in the division increased
2.9 per cent, while in the preceding decade it decreased 5.4 per cent.
Between 1880 and 1890 the number of farms decreased by 37,570,
losses having occurred in every state in the division except Penn-
sylvania and New Jersey, leaving a net loss between 1880 and 1900
of 18,633.
In all the South Atlantic states, except Virginia and the District
of Columbia, the number of farms reported has increased in every
decade since 1850. The exception in the case of Virginia was caused
by the formation from a part of its territory of the state of West
Virginia in 1863. From 1890 to 1900 the i)er cent of increase in
Virginia, West Virginia, and North and South Carolina was consider- |
DEVELOPMENT OF AGRICULTURE 615
able. The rate of gain was smallest in Delaware, where it was barely
3 per cent.
The number of farms reported from the North Central division
in 1900 was 14.2 per cent greater than in 1890. Each of the 12
states in that division showed an increase, the greatest percentages
of gain being in North Dakota, Minnesota, Missouri, Michigan, and
Wisconsin. In all these states, except Missouri, the increase was
due principally to the opening of new farms on the virgin prairie, or on
cleared forest lands. In Missouri the increase was largely caused
by a sub-division of some of the large farms.
In the South Central division the number of farms added in the
last ten years was twice as great as in the largest agricultural division,
the North Central, and the per cent of increase in the former division
was nearly four times as great as in the latter, and over twice that
for the United States. As no farms were reported for Indian Terri-
tory in 1890, the per cent of increase in the decade can not be expressed
for that territory. Among the other states and territories, the great-
est percentages of gain are shown in Oklahoma, Louisiana, Mississippi,
and Texas, in the order mentioned.
The number of farms has increased since 1890 in every state and
territory in the Western division, the per cent of gain for the group
being somewhat greater than that for the South Central. In this,
as in the South Central division, a part of the increase marks the
opening of new farms, and a part, the inclusion of the ranches using
the public domain, which had not previously been enumerated as
farms. It is impossible, from the data available, to determine the
actual and relative increase in the number of separate agricultural
establishments in the several states and territories of these two di-
visions. The publication, by states and territories, of the statistics
of occupation and of tenure of farm families, as compiled by the popu-
lation division, will furnish data for a trustworthy conclusion on this
subject.
In 1850 New York reported 170,621 farms, the largest number of
any state. Only two other states reported over 100,000. They were
Ohio, 143,807, and Pennsylvania, 127,577.
In 1900 fifteen states reported over 200,000 farms, as follows:
Texas, 352,190; Missouri, 284,886; Ohio, 276,719; Illinois, 264,151;
Kentucky, 234,667; Iowa, 228,622; New York, 226,720; Georgia,
224,691; North Carolina, 224,637; Tennessee, 224,623; Pennsylvania,
224,248; Alabama, 223,220; Indiana, 221,897; Mississippi, 220,803;
and Michigan, 203,261. ...
6i6
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
From 1850 to 1900 the reported area of farm land increased from
293,560,614 acres to 841,201,546 acres. The new land opened for
agricultural uses was 547,640,932 acres, or nearly twice as much as
that converted from the wilderness into farms prior to the middle
of the century. The improved land in farms, which v/as only
113,032,614 acres in 1850, advanced to 414,793,191 acres in 1900,
an increase during the half century of 301,760,577 acres, which
increase represents nearly three times the area under improvement
in 1850.
The productive power of the farm naturally increases in proportion
to the increase of its improved area. In 1850 the farms of the country
not only supplied the people with food and with most of the raw
material for clothing, but furnished also considerable quantities of
products for export. Since that time the crop-producing area has
increased so much faster than the national population that the
country now supplies its people with more and better food and with
more materials for clothing than ever before, and at the same time
exports agricultural products to an extent that was impossible until
recent years. . . . Had the area of improved land increased at no
greater rate than the national population (229 per cent), it would
have been only 371,877,300 acres, or 42,915,891 acres less than it
actually is. All this surplus area is available for the production of
food supplies for foreign nations; but, in fact, owing to improved
methods of cultivation and to the occupation of more fertile soils,
the exportations of agricultural products from this country have
increased in even greater proportion, and now have an annual value
nearly, if not quite, equal to one-half that of the total production of
staples in 1850. This is evidenced by a comparison of the Treasury
statement of exports in 1899 with the census crop report of 1849. . . ,
Average Number of Acres per Farm, by Geographic Divisions:
Summary 1850 to 1900
Geographic Divisions
1900
1890
1880
1870
i860
1850
The United States
146.6
136.5
133-7
153-3
199.2
202.6
North Atlantic.
South Atlantic. . .
North Central.
South Central .
Western
96.5
108.4
1445
iSS-4
386.1
95 3
133 6
133-4
144.0
324-1
97-7
157-4
121. 9
150 6
312.9
104.3
241. 1
123.7
194.4
336.4
108. 1
352.8
139 7
321 3
366.9
1X2. 6
376.4
143-3
291 .0
694.9
DEVELOPMENT OF AGRICULTURE 617
In all of the five geographic divisions, with the exception of the
North Central, the increase since 1850 in the number of farms has
been relatively greater than that in farm area, and consequently the
average size of farms, with the exception above noted, has decreased
during the same period. . . .
For the United States the average size of farms decreased from
1850 until 1880, since which year it has steadily increased. This
was true, also, in the North Central and Western divisions, but in
the North Atlantic states there was a decrease until 1890, a gain
being shown for the last decade only. If, however, the farm acreage
reported at the census of 1880 was, as has been estimated, approxi-
mately 2,500,000 acres in excess of the actual acreage, the average
size of farms in this division was smallest in 1880 and the changes
have been identical in time and character with those for the United
States. In the South Atlantic division there was a constant decrease
from 1850 to 1900, and in the South Central, from i860 to 1890. The
average for this latter group was greater in i860 than in 1850, and in
1900 than in 1890. ...
The value of farm property in 1900 was $20,514,001,838, a gain
in ten years of $4,431,734,149, or considerably more than the total
value reported fifty years before. The absolute increase in value for
the last decade did not greatly differ from that for the ten years
1850 to i860, which was $4,013,149,483, or from that for 1880 to
1890, which was $3,901,766,151. The percentages of gain for the
three periods, however, were quite different, being for the decade
1850 to i860, 1 01. 2 per cent; 1880 to 1890, 32.0 per cent; and for the
last decade, 27.6 per cent.
In the North Atlantic states the total value of farm property
increased during each decade from 1850 until 1880, since which year
it has decreased. The greatest increase reported was for the ten
years from 1850 to i860. This decade witnessed the largest per cent
of gain in all the geographic divisions.
In the South Atlantic states there was an especially great increase
from 1850 to i860. Then followed the Civil War with its great de-
struction of farm property, and from this disaster most of the states
did not fully recover before 1890.
The South Central states also suffered very severely from the Civil
War, and notwithstanding the opening up of vast areas of new land,
did not recover until 1890. The value of most of this new land was
so low that the gain in the value of farm property during the last decaxie
did not keep pace with the increase in farm area.
6i8 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
The North Central states have made large gains during each decade,
and over one-half of the increase in the last fifty years in the value
of all farm property has been in this division.
The Western states have made remarkable progress in each
decade, the greatest gain, however, occurring in the period from 1880
to 1890.
The average value per acre of all farm property in the United
States increased from $13.51 in 1850 to $25.81 in 1890. In 1900 it
was $24.39, the decrease being due to the extensive additions of cheap
land in the West and South, which more than counterbalanced the
actual increase in value of the great majority of American farms.
The average value for the South Central states reached its maximum
in i860, that for the North Atlantic and Western in 1890, and for the
South Atlantic and North Central in 1900. . . .
The Twelfth Census reports a total capital of $9,874,664,087 in-
vested in manufactures. Of this amount, $1,030,190,003 represents
the value of land; $1,456,983,130, that of buildings; $2,559,766,383,
that of machinery, tools, and implements; and $4,827,724,571, that
of cash and sundries, including under this head raw materials, stock
in process of manufacture, finished products on hand, amounts due
from the sale of finished products, and cash on hand.
It is impossible to prepare a statement of the capital invested in
agriculture to correspond exactly with the foregoing exhibit for manu-
factures, as the only forms of agricultural capital reported by the
census are those which correspond to the fixed capital of manufactures,
comprised in the first three items above mentioned and aggregating
$5,046,939,516. ' •
The fixed capital of agriculture, comprising the value of the land,
buildings, and improvements, of implements and machinery, and of
live stock, was valued, June i, 1900, at $20,514,001,838, or more than
four times that of manufactures. Judged by the standard of fixed
ca[)ital, therefore, agriculture leads manufactures by a ratio of more
than 4 to I.
Corresponding to the -'"live capital" of manufactures, included
under the head of "cash and sundries," are the value of all farm
I)roducts on hand June i, 1900, the money due from their sales, the
value of the growing crops of the year 1900, and the cash on hand
and such cash in bank as is kcjit for use as supi)lementary capital in
farming operations, but not permanent investments either in bank
or in industries other than agriculture. These items have an enormous
aggregate value, of which no definite statement can be made. It
DEVELOPMENT OF AGRICULTURE 619
does not, however, constitute as large a per cent of the total farm capital
as the ^'live capital" forms of the total invested in manufactures.
But even if this "live capital" were to be wholly disregarded and
comparisons were to be made between the fixed capital of agriculture
and the total capital, both fixed and live, of manufactures, investments
in agriculture would still be more than twice as great as in manufac-
tures. If conservative estimates of the ''live capital" of agriculture
be included, it is found that the industry has a total investment
perhaps two and one-fourth times as great as that in manufactures.
In either case, judged by investment, agriculture still leads manu-
factures by a wide margin. . . .
In the decade from i860 to 1870 the Civil War directly and in-
directly wrought great changes in the agriculture of the country. The
organization of great armies increased the market demand for food
products in the North. The supply of labor was diminished, for the
time being, but was increased later by the great immigration move-
ment that had begun in the preceding decade. Agricultural produc-
tion in the North was greatly extended, and land values continued to
rise. Thousands of miles of railroad were constructed, and the Union
Pacific, completed in 1869, opened a new pathway to the Pacific coast.
The passage of the homestead law in 1862, granting land to the actual
settler on the public domain, made it easier for all, and especially
for those having little or no capital, to obtain farm homes, and improv-
ing transportation facilities made agriculture on the new farms
profitable.
As a result, many persons, and especially soldiers of the Northern
Army, moved at the close of the Civil War from the East to the West.
Land values in that section advanced more rapidly than elsewhere.
In fact, the westward movement of the younger farmers and the
increasing competition of the cheaper and more fertile grainfields of
the West, caused land values in some^arts of New England to suffer
a slight decrease. The growing demand for American breadstuffs
and meat products in Europe checked, for a time, the tendency toward
further decrease in land values in the East.by maintaining high prices
for agricultural products in all parts of the country. The extent of
that demand and its influence in stimulating production and settle-
ment in the West, and its temporary influence in the East, are shown
by the fact that agricultural exports increased from $256,560,972
in i860 to $361,188,483 in 1870, although by 1870 cotton exportation
had not attained the proportions which were reached a little later.
The conditions in the South in this decade were radically differ-
620 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
ent from those in the North. As a result of the war, the markets of
the South were destroyed, investments in slaves were lost, and land
improvements deteriorated. The close of the war found the planters
bankrupt, their credit destroyed, and agriculture and all business
paralyzed by lack of working capital. Vast areas of land went out of
cultivation, the reported acreage of farm land in all the Southern
states was less in 1870 than in i860, and the total and average
values of land everywhere decreased.
The inflation of the currency during the war affected values ex-
pressed in paper money, exaggerating advances and concealing de-
clines. The real change during the decade is therefore better indicated
by comparing the gold values of 1870 with those of i860. The average
increase in land values in the North Atlantic, North Central, and
Western divisions was over $5 per acre, while in the two Southern
divisions there were decreases of from $3 to $5 per acre. . . .
With the readjustment which took place during this decade in the
labor conditions of the South, agricultural operations in that section
began to assume their old proportions. The growing demand for
cotton in the factory centers of the world stimulated its cultivation,
and soon resulted in a great increase in production. The extent and
rapidity of the recovery from the condition of demoralization follow-
ing the Civil War are shown by the fact that, while in i860, the last
year of uninterrupted slave labor, 5,387,052 bales of an average weight
of 445 pounds were produced, in 1880 the product was 5,755,359
bales of an average weight of 453 pounds. The reestablishment of
Southern agriculture on a solid basis assisted in restoring the values
of the old farm lands of the South.
The increased demand for cotton resulted in a great movement
of population from the South and elsewhere to the new cotton lands
of Texas and the Southwest. Large areas were settled, and land
values advanced there as in the South and West.
The growing European demand for American beef, and the in-
creasing consumption of wool in American factories, encouraged the
keeping of live stock on the public domain of the West, and especially
in Texas. Steers and sheep began to take the place of buffaloes,
and the rapid development of the range industry assisted in enhanc-
ing the value of the Western farm lands reported by the census
of 1880.
The panic of 1873, brought about by the excessive construction
of railroads and by over speculation, checked many lines of in-
dustry, and for want of remunerative occupations in the towns
DEVELOPMENT OF AGRICULTURE 621
and cities a proportionally greater movement of population toward
the farming sections followed. The panic resulted in the reorgan-
ization of many railroads, and in lower transportation rates, which
in turn assisted in encouraging settlement on the new farm lands
of the West.
During this decade, the cost of transporting agricultural products
from the West to the seaboard constantly decreased, and the compe-
tition between the cheap, fertile prairies of the West and the less pro-
ductive lands of the East became very apparent. The grain-raising
sections of the East suffered most, and land values declined there,
while in the West they greatly increased. Sections of the East devoted
to dairy farming, market gardening, and fruit growing suffered less,
as it was impracticable, except during a limited portion of the year,
to bring the products of these industries from the Western states
and deliver them in good condition in Eastern markets.
In this decade, then, land values in the South advanced, and the
effects of the Civil War were partially overcome; there was a still
greater advance in the North Central and Western states; but the
East began to be adversely affected, and in many sections there was
a marked decline in the average as well as the total value of farm
lands. . . .
In 1850 only eight states reported farm land to the value of
$100,000,000 or over. They were: New York, $554,546,642; Penn-
sylvania, $407,876,099; Ohio, $358,758,603; Virginia, $216,401,543;
Kentucky, $155,021,262; Indiana, $136,385,173; New Jersey, $120,-
237,511; and Massachusetts, $109,076,347.
In 1900 there were seven states with land values of over $800,-
000,000, as follows: Illinois, $1,765,581,550; Iowa, $1,497,554,790;
Ohio, $1,036,615,180; Pennsylvania, $898,272,750; New York, $888,-
134,180; Missouri, $843,979,213; and Indiana, $841,735,340. . . .
The values of farming implements on hand at the date of census
enumeration increased in each decade since 1850 in the North At-
lantic, North Central, and Western divisions, while in the South
Atlantic and South Central states they showed a tremendous decline
in the decade i860 to 1870, again reflecting the disastrous effect of
the Civil War. The percentages of increase in the North Atlantic and
North Central divisions were least for the decade 1880 to 1890, and
in the Western states, for the decade 1890 to 1900. In the Civil
War period the value of farming implements and machinery in the
South Atlantic states declined $14,020,511, or 41.2 per cent, and in
the South Central, $31,435,478, or 51.3 per cent. After 1870 the val-
622 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
ues increased in both divisions, but not until 1890 did the aggregate
of such gain suffice to give the South Atlantic division as large a re-
ported value of this class of farm property as it had in i860; and in
the South Central states, notwithstanding the great growth of popu-
lation, the farmers did not, until 1900, report as lari^e investments
in machinery as they did prior to the war. . . .
The five states with the highest values of farming implements
and machinery reported in 1900 were Iowa, with $57,960,660; New
York, with $56,006,000; Pennsylvania, with $50,917,240; lUinois,
with $44,977,310; and Ohio, with $36,354,150. The highest aver-
ages per farm were reported by Hawaii, District of Columbia, Nevada,
North Dakota, California, Montana, New Jersey, and Iowa, in the
order named; and the highest averages per acre, by the District of
Columbia, Hawaii, Alaska, New Jersey, Massachusetts, and Rhode
Island.
For the United States the value of machinery per acre of farm land
has increased since 1850 from $0.52 to $0.90, or nearly 80 per cent,
and since 1880 from $0.76 to $0.90, or about 20 per cent. These
increases in money value, however, do not measure the added useful-
ness of the new machinery. That is measured principally by the
degree to which the machinery saves human labor by substituting
the power of animals or of steam. It is interesting, therefore, to
inquire what changes have been made in the past fifty years in the
use of animal power on farms in connection with these new machines.
A comparison of human and animal labor on farms in relation to
the acreage of crops cultivated can be made only for the period
since 1880.
B. Importance of Irrigation, i8gg ^
The importance of irrigation to agriculture and the extent to which it was
proposed to carry it on by the government were shown to be in 1899 as follows:
Testimony given before the Industrial Commission shows that
irrigation by English-speaking people in the United States began half
a century ago among the Mormons in Utah and at scattered points
near the mining districts in California. Twenty years later it was
adopted at separate places in Colorado and adjacent States and
Territories. It is estimated that 40 per cent of the United States
proper requires irrigation for successfully producing plants useful as
a food supply for man and animals. In 1890 a little over three and
» Pinal Report of the Industrial Commission (Washington, 1902), Volume
XIX of the Commission's Report, 1073-6.
DEVELOPMENT OF AGRICULTURE 623
one-half million acres were cropped by irrigation, and in the succeed-
ing ten years this area has been doubled, largely by the more careful
use of water and more complete tilling of farms already partly irri-
gated. Since 1895 there have been comparatively few notable works
of irrigation built, and development along this line may be said to
have nearly ceased. This cessation of activity in irrigation devel-
opment is not because there is no longer water or fertile land, but
because, as before stated, the easily available waters are already util-
ized, and it has not been found profitable to store floods nor to con-
struct large works by private enterprise, any more than it would be
profitable for individuals to dredge harbors or build light-houses.
Moreover, it must be borne in mind, not only is it important that
an ample supply of water for irrigation shall be secured and controlled,
but also that it shall be stored for use when most needed and when the
most remunerative crops can be obtained. Sugar beets, potatoes,
alfalfa, and orchards, all require irrigation in August and September,
which is the season of least supply. These crops require, as a rule, but
little water, while yielding large returns. . . .
Briefly summarized, therefore, it may be stated that the agri-
cultural interests of sixteen States and Territories of the West depend
directly, in part at least, upon irrigation and irrigation methods.
These States and Territories are Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho,
Kansas, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota,
Oklahoma, Oregon, South Dakota, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming.
They comprise an area of nearly 1,500,000 square miles, almost one-
half the area of the United States proper, and support a population of
about 6,000,000 of people.
This large district, extending from the Gulf of Mexico (for a large
section of Texas may be included) to the Canadian border, and practi-
cally from the Mississippi to the Pacific, constitutes what is known as
the arid or semiarid districts of the West. Into this territory rail-
roads penetrated far in advance of population. Those who entered
into the migratory movement westward during the seventies and
early eighties took up a portion of this land, only to learn that the water
supply thereof was insufficient to rely upon for profitable cultivation.
After occupation for some time, much of it was given up entirely,
public buildings were abandoned, and whole communities disappeared
from the towns they had built. In other sections attempts at irriga-
tion, more or less successful, were made, and millions of acres thereby
reclaimed to civilization.
In many of these States the production of foodstuffs has not
624 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
reached the point of supplying the home demand, arising largely from
the development and progress of mining and other local industries.
Extension of food production must come through irrigation, or not
at all. . . .
But the benefits of irrigation are not confined to the arid regions
of the West. In sections of the country East and South it has been
gaining ground as a feature of agriculture in the growing of high-
priced products. A regular water supply is a necessary condition in
order that dry seasons may not destroy the outlay of the producer.
In Connecticut, Massachusetts, and New Jersey irrigation has made
the growing of small fruits highly profitable. The possibilities of its
application to market gardening are almost unUmited. In Wisconsin
irrigation has been used for cranberry growing and for obtaining a
setting of sod on the sandy pine lands. Tobacco growers in Connec-
ticut are likewise using irrigation. In southern Louisiana and southern
Texas the area of rice culture has been extended in some cases as
much as fourfold within a year or two. Water is pumped into the
canals for the purpose. Hundreds of wells are being sunk in Louisi-
ana for the rice fields. The older methods of rice culture, such as
have prevailed in the Carolinas, are giving place to the newer systems,
based on irrigation and the use of improved harvesting machines.
Thus the widening of the irrigated area not only increases the sum
total of national products, but extends the home market for manu-
factures.
C. Dry Farmings igo^ ^
Hand in hand with irrigation has gone dry farming. Both are the result
of a scarcity of rainfall in a great area of the west. In 1905 an expert
directed attention to the importance of this method of farming as follows:
Between the line of 20 inches average annual rainfall and the Rocky
Mountains there is a strip of land reaching from Canada to the Gulf
of Mexico, embracing about 300,000,000 acres, which for agriculture
is debatable ground. . . . Together they present one of the greatest
problems of American agriculture. The area is great, the soil is
deep and exceedingly fertile, and the climate healthful and agreeable
aside from lack of moisture. Men need it for homes. All interests
are eager to see these areas settled, provided the settlers can be self-
supporting, or to avert this if settlement is to mean disaster. From
all classes come the questions: What methods will make the most of
* Yearbook of the Department of Agriculture, loof; (Washington. 1906),
4«3-7, 430.
DEVELOPMENT OF AGRICULTURE 625
these lands? How can they be made to support the largest number
of people and give them the greatest measure of human comfort?
There is a variety of causes tempting men to plow up the native
sod. The stockman realizes the need of a reserve food supply and
seeks to provide it by growing Kafir corn, sorghum, rye, hay, and other
drought-resistant forage crops. The eastern farmer finds these broad,
rolHng plains, with their fertile soil and freedom from rocks or stumps,
attractive. Hopeful, enterprising men are prone to believe that settle-
ment and cultivation will change the climate, and a few wet years
are almost certain to create a wave of settlement.
EARLY FAILURE AND ITS LESSONS
The first general attempt of this kind began in 1883. Western
Kansas and Nebraska were dotted with farmhouses. Eastern Colo-
rado was largely settled up between 1886 and 1889. A few wet years,
in which fine crops were grown, were followed by a succession of dry
seasons. On millions of acres crops shriveled and died, men lost hope
and energy through repeated bitter failures, and women and children
endured dreary years of poverty and hardship. Homes which repre-
sented the savings of a lifetime had to be abandoned. Whole coun-
ties were almost depopulated. What had been thriving towns were
deserted.
The bitter lessons of this failure lasted for years, but its scars at
length healed. Other influences were meanwhile at work to restore
confidence in ability to farm this region. As a result, another wave
of settlement is sweeping over these plains. Other settlers are buying
the abandoned farms. Deserted towns are being rebuilt and new
ones laid out. This latest attempt is not, however, a repetition of
the first. New methods are being tried. Much has been learned in
past twenty years. Practically every settler who has remained
in the semiarid belt has been an experimenter in developing a kind of
agriculture suited to this climate. . . .
The agricultural problems of the semiarid region relate to heat and
moisture. There is no lack of fertility. The average rainfall, which
varies from 20 inches on the eastern margin of the semiarid district
to 10 inches on the western, is not simply scanty, it is irregular. . . .
There are years when the average is almost cut in two, and there are
months without a cloud and days, especially in the Southwest, when
the winds are like a blast from a furnace — so hot and dry that they
change green fields of corn into dry and rattlmg stalks in twenty-four
hours. . . .
626 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
In order to lessen the losses in dry years and to extend farming
beyond the point where the rainfall of a single year is sufficient to
grow crops, summer fallowing is employed. The ground is plowed,
pulverized, anJlcept free from crops or weeds, the main purpose being
to lessen evap>oration and save the moisture faUing on the soil from
one year to the next. Thus when a crop is planted on this land the
following year, two seasons' rainfall is utilized to grow one crop.
Special tools and methods of cultivation have been devised to lessen
the losses by evaporation from the summer-fallowed fields and remark-
able results have been achieved, but a summer-fallowing will answer
for annual crops only. It will serve to grow wheat and many of the
drought-resistant crops that are now a feature of the dry farm, but
will not answer for trees, and in many cases it will not answer for al-
falfa. Trees, small fruits, or alfalfa can not be moved each year from
the summer-fallowed to the nonsummer-fallowed field. For these
the dry farm provides no method of tiding over the seasons when a
dry winter is followed by a dry spring and when the soil moisture
falls below the needs of plant life. If these are to be features of the
dry farm, the additional water supply which is necessary to maintain
continuous growth must be furnished by irrigation. Nor do the most
sanguine expectations of the effectiveness of dry-farming methods
justify belief in immunity from drought, even with the best methods
or safest crops. . . .
But when all this has been said the fact must be recognized that
the dry farm taken alone has not the attraction or the security of
farming under irrigation, or of farming in Iowa and Illinois, where the
rainfall is ample. Nothing can be more dreary or discouraging than
the aspect of the dry farmer's home in midsummer. Without shade
trees, without green grass, without fruit, the dead, dusty, and lifeless
appearance of the landscape is monotonous beyond measure. It
makes one realize that "a, world without turf is, indeed, a desert."
The fact that many of these farmers are prosperous does not remove
the need for trees, fruit, grass, and gardens, nor lessen the value of
these features of a home as seen on irrigated farms in the same region.
The dry farm needs enough irrigation to provide these things. It
needs it for the comfort of the family. It needs it for the opportu-
nities it will give to make a living in dry years, as well as larger profits
in wet ones, and it is only by supplemental irrigation that the limits
of settlement can be pushed westward across the driest part of the
semiarid belt. The present situation requires that the chances of
failure be clearly faced, and it is the writer's conviction that there are
DEVELOPMENT OF AGRICULTURE 627
hundreds of settlers in the western half of the semiarid belt who must
supplement the dry farm by irrigation; and unless they do, the next
period of drought will witness a greater exodus and more hardship
and privation than the first.
V. Southern Agriculture
Tenancy, Size of Farms, and Character of Crops, i8jo-igio^
The Civil War and its results caused radical changes in southern agriculture,
the most important of which was the readjustment of land tenure. Many of the
large plantations, which had formerly been worked by slaves, were broken up and
rented or sold to the freedmen. In either case the change was radical, but the
question of tenancy has been the most important.
Previous to the Civil War there were many large farms in the
South which were mostly worked by slave labor. These were ordi-
narily called plantations. There was no sharp line of distinction at
that time, nor is there at present, between plantations and other
farms, the term "plantation" being applied simply to large farms
usually comprising- several hundred or even thousands of acres.
Prior to the war each plantation was, of course, a single agricultural
unit and was so reported by the census, being counted as one of the
farms of the country.
During the period of reconstruction after the Civil War the owners
of the plantations largely tried to work them by hiring labor. A
movement soon began, however, for the substitution of the tenant
system of operation. Under this system a plantation was sub-divided
into small tracts — commonly called ''parcels" or "cuts" — each of
which was operated by a tenant. The tenants were designated by
various terms, such as "cropper," "standing renter," and the like.
Since there were considerable numbers of tenant farms in the
North as well as in the South, the Census Bureau very naturally
adopted the practice of treating the tenant farms in the South in the
same manner as those in the North; that is to say, each tract of land
operated by a tenant was treated as a separate farm. As a matter
of fact, however, a large proportion of the tenants in the South actu-
ally occupied a very different economic position from that usually
occupied by tenants in other parts of the country. The plantation
as a unit for general purposes of administration has not disappeared,
and in many cases the tenants on plantations are subjected to quite
as complete supervision by the owner, general lessee, or manager as
^ Thirteenth Census, igio. Agriculture (Washington, 1913), Vol. V, 877-8.
628 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
that to which the hired laborers are subjected on large farms in tht
North and West. Where this is the case a tenant is very similar in
his economic position to the hired farm laborer, practically the onl\
difference being that he confines his work to a particular parcel ui
land which he works by himself and that he is paid by a share of th(
crop instead of by wages. There are also some plantations in tin
South which are operated by hired labor. The distinction drawn in
popular speech is still based on the size of the agricultural unit and not
on the form of organization. . . .
From what has been said it is evident that the statistics of agri-
culture for the South, when each tenant holding is treated as a sepa-
rate farm, are in some respects not comparable with those for other
parts of the country. In the North and the West a tenant farm i>
very similar in its method of operation to a farm operated by th(.
owner himself. The owner ordinarily exercises very little super-
vision over the operations of the tenant, and the latter has substan-
tially an independent economic status. Tenant farms in the North
and West are in general quite as large as the farms operated by their
owners, and the tenant farmer often employs hired labor to assist
him. In the South, on the other hand, a very large proportion of the
tenant farms are decidedly small, containing no more land than can
be effectively worked by the tenant alone, with perhaps the assist-
ance of his own family. Moreover, many, though not all, of the
tenants are subjected to very thorough supervision by the owner
or manager of the plantation of which the farm is a part. As th(
result of this difference in conditions, the average size of farms in the
South, when each separate tenant farm is counted as a unit, is ver}
much less than in the North or the West, and the statistics give an
impression which does not correspond to actual conditions. . . .
During the half century between the census of i860, the last
census before the process of breaking the plantations up into tenant
farms commenced, and that of 19 10, the amount of land in farm>
in the 11 Southern states increased only 43.3 per cent, while the
number of farms, as returned by the census, increased from somewhat
more than half a million to about two and a half million, or 353.7
per cent. In i860 the average farm contained 365.1 acres, of which
103.5 acres were improved, and the average value of land and build-
ings per farm was $3,370. In 1910 the average farm had decreased
in size to 11 5.3 acres, of which 43.8 acres were improved, the average
value of land and buildings being $2,172. In the East South Central
and South Atlantic divisions the average total acreage in 1910 was
DEVELOPMENT OF AGRICULTURE
629
materially lower than that for all of the states . . . , the latter
being increased by the presence of many very large ranches in
the West South Central division. . . . [There has also] been a con-
tinuous decline since i860 in the average size of farms in the plan-
tation districts, the greatest decrease taking place between i860
and 1870.
The effect of the method of classifying farms in the South is fur-
ther shown in [the following table] by a comparison of the average
total and improved acreage and value of land and buildings for that
section with the corresponding averages for the North.
CENSUS YEAR
I9IO
1900
1890
1880
1870
i860
1850
AVERAGE ACRES OF
LAND PER FARM
The
South
114. 4
138.2
139-7
153 -4
214. 2
335-4
332-1
The
North
143.0
133-2
123.7
114. 9
117. 0
126.4
127. 1
AVERAGE IMPROVED
ACRES PER FARM
The
South
48.6
48.1
58.8
56.2
69.2
101.3
The
North
100
90
87
76
69
68
65
AVERAGE VALUE
OF LAND AND
BUILDINGS PER
FARM
The
South
$2,374
1,251
1,402
1,224
1,456
3,455
2,051
The
North
$8,182
4,190
3,721
3,314
3,463
3,180
2,380
VI. Farms and Farm Property and Crops
A. General View, igio ^
The decade from 1900 to 1910 saw a remarkable^development i> Amp.riran
agriculture, particularly in the value of farm products~and of farm property. This
development is indicated in the Thirteenth Census as follows:
There were in the United States at the time the census enumera-
tion was made 6,361,502 farms, containing 878,798,325 acres, of which
478,451,750 acres were improved, the remaining 400,346,575 acres
comprising the acreage of woodland and other unimproved land. Of
this latter acreage, 190,865,553 acres were reported as woodland
and 209,481,022 acres as other unimproved land. The land in farms
^ Thirteenth Census, 1910. Agriculture (Washington, 1913), Vol. V, 27-9, 33-4,
37, 43-4.
630 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
represented 46.2 per cent, or somewhat less than one-half of the
total land area of the country. The improved land, which formed
more than one-half (54.4 per cent) of the farm land, represented only
about one-fourth (25.1 per cent) of the total land area of the country.
The average size of a farm was 138. i acres, of which on the average
75.2 acres were improved and 62.9 acres unimproved. . . .
It is a significant fact that whereas the total population increased
21 per cent between 1900 and 19 10, the population of the territory
which was classed as urban in 1910 (that is, resident in places having
at that census 2,500 or more inhabitants) increased 34.8 per cent
during the decade, and the population of the territory classed as rural
in 1910 increased only 11.2 per cent. It will be noted that the
rural population, under the census classification, includes much more
than the agricultural population, and it is probable that the agri-
cultural population increased even less rapidly. Indeed if the cen-
sus distinction of urban population were drawn at incorporated
places of 1,000 inhabitants or of 500 inhabitants the rate of increase
in "rural" population would probably be less than 10 per cent. The
number and acreage of farms increased much less rapidly than the
total population, but the growth in the number of farms, 10.9 per
cent, nearly kept pace with the increase of the rural population, 11.2
per cent. The total farm acreage, on the other hand, increased
only 4.8 per cent. This, however, is less significant than the increase
of 15.4 per cent in the improved farm acreage, which still fell appre-
ciably below the increase in total population. . . .
The small increase in the total farm acreage was partly due to
changes in conditions under which land was held. Not all land
reported as in farms is in any true sense used as farm land. In some
cases considerable amounts of land formerly owned by farmers but not
found immediately available for agricultural purposes have since been
purchased for speculation, and although reported as in farms in 1900
were not so classified in 1910. On the other hand, in some cases
large stock ranches which as entireties were reported as "farms" in
1900 have since been partly divided into smaller farms and partly
left unused for agricultural purposes. The formation of forest re-
serves and the purchase of large tracts of land by wealthy citizens
for country homes have also tended to keep farm acreage from in-
creasing rapidly. . .
That the number *m ictiii..^ increased more ra|Mdly than the acreage
of land in farms is accounted for partly by the fact that in some sec-
tions of the country considerable numbers of small truck, poultry, and
DEVELOPMENT OF AGRICULTURE 631
fruit farms have been established, but still more by the fact that in
the West large numbers of farms of moderate size have been estab-
lished where great cattle ranches were formerly found. Then, too,
in the Southern states the subdivision of many plantations into
smaller tracts of land operated by tenants — a process begun soon
after the Civil War — has continued, each of such tracts counting
as a farm under the census definition. . . .
The total value of all farm property in 19 10 reached the enormous
sum of $40,991,449,000, of which over two-thirds (69.5 per cent)
represented the value of land, somewhat less than one-sixth (15.4
per cent) the value of buildings, and about the same proportion
(15. 1 per cent) the value of the equipment. The value of land formed
an appreciably larger proportion of the total value of farm property
in 1 9 10 than in 1900. The total value of farm property a little more
than doubled during the decade 1 900-1 910. The greater part of this
extraordinary increase was in the value of farm land, which increased
no less than 118.1 per cent. This latter increase was largely due to
the advance in the selling price of land, the average exchange value
per acre being more than twice as high in 1910 as in 1900 — $32.40 as
compared with $15.57. There were remarkable increases also in the
value of farm buildings and equipment during the decade, the value
of buildings having increased 77.8 per cent, that of implements and
machinery 68.7 per cent, and that of live stock 60.1 per cent. These
increases were due in part to higher prices of building materials,
implements, and farm animals and do not represent correspondingly
great additions to physical property.
In spite of the decrease in the average size of farms, from 146.2
acres to 138. i acres, the value of all farm property per farm increased
from $3,563 in 1900 to $6,444 in 1910, or 80.9 per cent. The average
value per farm of each class of property increased materially, but the
largest increase was in the value of land, from $2,276 per farm in 1900
to $4,476 in 1910.
The average value of all farm property per acre of land in
farms increased from $24.37 in 1900 to $46.64 in 1910, a gain of 91.4
per cent. The investment of farmers in buildings and equipment
is chiefly utilized in connection with improved land. The average
value of buildings per acre of improved land was $13.22 in 1910 as
compared with [$]8.58 in 1900, while for equipment the corresponding
averages were $12.94 and $9.23, respectively. . . .
In each of the three geographic divisions in the territory north
of the Ohio and east of the Mississippi — New England, Middle At-
632 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
lantic, and East North Central — there was an actual decrease in
the number of farms between 1900 and 1910, despite the large increase
in population, which was chiefly in urban communities. In the
West North Central division the increase in the number of farms was
comparatively small, amounting to only 4.6 per cent, although suffi-
cient to bring about a small increase for the North taken as a whole.
In all of the other five divisions there was a very considerable increase
in the number of farms. In the East South Central and Mountain
divisions the per cent of increase in the number of farms was greater
than that of the total population.
The changes in the number of farms in the various divisions of
the country, as in the United States as a whole, in most instances
followed the movement in the rural population more closely than
that of the total population. This is especially noticeable in the West
South Central division, where the increase in the number of farms
exceeded that for any other division, and where the percentage of
increase, 24.9, shows a fairly close correspondence to that for the
rural population.
Great differences appear among the several geographic divisions
with respect to the changes in the total acreage of land in farms
between 1900 and 1910. In the New England, Middle Atlantic,
South Atlantic, and West South Central divisions there was a decrease
in the acreage reported in farms. The largest decrease, both in abso-
lute amount and in percentage, was in the West South Central divi-
sion, but this is in fact more apparent than real. A considerable
increase in the acreage of farms occurred in two of the states of this
division — Arkansas and Oklahoma. In Louisiana a moderate de-
crease appeared, due to the fact that much undeveloped land in the
extreme southern part of the state, which, although not actually
used for agriculture, had been reported as in farms in 1900, was subse-
quently purchased by nonresidents and was not reported as farm
land in 1910. In Texas there was nominally a very great decrease
in the acreage of farm land, but a large part, if not all, of this de-
crease was due to the fact that in 1900 the state contained many
enormous ranches which in their entirety were reported as farm
land, whereas in 1910 many of these ranches had been divided into
smaller tracts, some of which were reported as farms, while others
not being actually in use for agricultural purposes, were omitted from
the reports. Some large tracts of land, which were owned by non-
residents and not used at the time of the enumeration in 19 10, had
been used more or less for grazing in 1900 and were reported at that
DEVELOPMENT OF AGRICULTURE 633
time as in farms. The acreage of improved land in Texas increased
greatly during the decade.
The largest absolute increase in the acreage of farm land between
1900 and 1 910 occurred in the West North Central division, which
at both censuses comprised a larger area of farm land than any other,
the advance being from slightly more than 201,008,713 acres in 1900
to 232,648,121 acres in 1910, or 15.7 per cent. The highest rate of
increase was in the Mountain division, 28.3 per cent.
The farm acreage in the North as a whole increased 8 per cent
and that in the South decreased 2.1 per cent, chiefly because of the
conditions in Louisiana and Texas as mentioned above. In the West,
notwithstanding the large increase in the number of farms, the gain
in farm land was but 18.2 per cent, but the fact that the gain was not
large is partly due to conditions similar to those in Texas.
. . . [I]n the New England, Middle Atlantic, and East North
Central divisions, every state except Michigan and Wisconsin shows
a decrease between 1900 and 1910 in the land in farms, and in these
two the gains were of small importance. The most notable increases
were in three contiguous states of the West North Central division,
namely, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Nebraska. In the West
South Central division Oklahoma shows a conspicuous increase, and
in the Mountain division, New Mexico.
The largest absolute gain in the improved land in farms between
1900 and 1910 occurred in the West North Central division — from
135,643,828 acres to 164,284,862 acres, the rate of increase being
2 1. 1 per cent. Notwithstanding the nominal loss in total acreage
of farm land in the West South Central division, the improved land
showed a large gain — 18,493,743 acres, or 46.5 per cent. Moreover,
in the South Atlantic division, although there was a loss in total
acreage of farm land, the gain in improved acreage was 5.2 per cent.
The highest percentage of gain was in the Mountain division — 89.4
per cent. Decreases in improved acreage appeared in the New
England and Middle Atlantic divisions, these decreases being rela-
tively greater than those in the total farm acreage. The East and
West North Central divisions, on the other hand, show a greater
relative increase in improved than in total farm acreage. Despite
the slight decrease in the total farm land in the territory east of the
Mississippi, there was a gain of 2.8 per cent in the improved acreage.
In the territory west of the Mississippi, however, nine-tenths of the
total increase in the improved farm acreage of the country occurred,
the rate of increase for this section being 28.6 per cent.
634 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
Among individual states North Dakota showed the greatest
absolute increase in improved farm acreage during the decadi
gaining 10,810,572 acres. The only other states where more
than 2,000,000 acres were added to the improved farm land were
Oklahoma, Texas, Nebraska, Kansas, South Dakota, Washing-
ton, and Colorado. The highest percentage of increase — 348.9 —
was shown for New Mexico, followed by North Dakota, Montana,
and Oklahoma, in each of which the improved land more than
doubled. . . .
The average size of farms is smaller in the older sections of the
country than in the newer, and in general, for reasons explained
below, it is smaller in the South than in the North. More specifically,
the average size of farms in 1910 was smallest in the East South
Central division, being only 78.2 acres. It was 92.2 acres in the Middle
Atlantic division; 93.3 in the South Atlantic; 104.4 in New England;
and 105 in the East North Central division. These five divisions do
not differ so widely from one another as they all do from the four
divisions lying west of the Mississippi River, in each of which the
farms averaged much larger, ranging from 179.3 acres in the West
South Central to 324.5 acres in the Mountain division. Among the
individual states the average size of farms was greatest in Nevada,
Wyoming, and Montana. In these states there are still many great
cattle and sheep ranches which are reported as single farms, thus
materially increasing the average size. North and South Dakota
ranked next to these three states, but the high averages for them is
largely due to a different cause. Most of the farms in these states
were acquired under the homestead and other land laws, and a large
proportion of the settlers secured as much as 320 acres of land. A
further contributing cause is the large number of great wheat farms
in these two states. . . .
In the South there are many plantations, some of very large
acreage, which have been divided into small parcels of land of from
20 to 80 acres, each leased to a tenant. The operations of the tenants
are often so completely supervised by the owner that the plantation
is virtually a single agricultural unit, but in the census statistics the
land operated by each tenant is classed as a farm. There are also
in the South, however, large numbers of rented farms, the tenants
of which are substantially independent in their management. The
independent tenant system of the South is more or less like the tenant
system of the North and West, but there is little similarity between
it and the plantation tenant system. The plantation operated by
DEVELOPMENT OF AGRICULTURE 635
tenants, is, in many respects more like the large northern farm oper-
ated with hired labor or wage hands. . . .
Among the various states, Illinois with $120.08 per acre and
Iowa with $110.40 per acre, reported the highest average value of all
farm property per acre of farm land in 1910, while New Mexico re-
ported the lowest, $14.15. These states ranked the same with respect
to average value of land alone per acre, the amounts being $95.02,
$82.58, and $8.77, respectively. In the average value of buildings,
however, as well as in that of implements and machinery. New Jersey
ranked first, with Wyoming lowest in respect to average value of
buildings, and New Mexico lowest in respect to average value of
implements and machinery. In the average value of live stock per
acre, Arizona and Iowa, in the order named, outranked the other
states (not counting the District of Columbia), while North CaroUna
had the lowest average. In Arizona, however, as in certain other
Western states, live stock is largely pastured on public lands and a
comparison of the value of live stock with the acreage of land in farms
has little significance.
The southern divisions of the country in general showed greater
percentages of increase in the value of all farm property per acre
of farm land during the decade 1900-1910 than the northern divisions.
The West South Central division outranked all others in this respect,
with an increase of 147.2 per cent. The two most westerly divisions,
the Pacific and Mountain, ranked second and third, respectively, in
percentages of increase, followed by the South Atlantic and the West
North Central. In all five of the divisions just named the average
value of all farm property per acre of land was more than twice as
high in 1910 as in 1900. The lowest rate of increase, 33 per cent,
was in the Middle Atlantic division. . . .
The principal factor in the increase in the average value of farm
property as a whole per acre of land in farms has been the increase
in the average value of land per acre. ... In five of the nine geo-
graphic divisions, namely, the four west of the Mississippi River to-
gether with the South Atlantic, the average value of land in farms
per acre was more than twice as high in 1 910 as in 1900; and in the
Mountain division it was more than three times as high. In the East
North Central and East South Central divisions the increase in value
of farm land per acre exceeded 75 per cent. The lowest percentages
of increase were in the Middle Atlantic and New England divisions,
being 24.5 per cent and 40.5 per cent, respectively.
In the United States as a whole, and in most of the divisions,
636 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
the relative increase during the decade in the average value of build-
ings, implements and machinery, and live stock per acre of land in
farms was much less than the increase in the average value per acre
of the land.
The highest rates of increase in the average value of buildings
per acre were in the West South Central division, 132.4 per cent;
the Mountain, 106.8 per cent; the South Atlantic, 97.6 per cent;
and the Pacific, 89.9 per cent. In every state the average value of
buildings per acre of land in farms was higher in 1910 than in 1900;
in Arizona and Oklahoma it was more than three times as great;
and in 16 other states it was more than double.
B. Distribution of Leading Crops y igog *
The leading agricultural crops in 1909 were corfl^jytieat, cotton, hay and forage,
oats, vegetables, fruits and tobacco. Illinois led the states in the value oF all farm
products, after which came Iowa, Texas, Ohio, Georgia and Missouri:
A rapid characterization of the agriculture in the three great
sections of the country may be expressed as follows: In the North
the leading crops, in order of value in 1909, were corn, hay and forage,
wheat, and oats; in the South they were cotton, corn, vegetables,
and hay and forage; and in the West, hay and forage, wheat, fruits
and nuts, vegetables, and oats. In each of the three sections the
crops named together constituted about four-fifths of the total value
of the crops produced in 1909.
Cereals contributed more than one-fourth of the total value of
crops in all the divisions except New England where they formed
only 7.6 per cent of the total value of crops raised in 1909. The
importance of these crops was greatest in the two North Central
divisions, the value forming about three-fourths (75.4 per cent) of
the total value of crops in the West North Central division, and about
two-thirds (65.4 per cent) in the East North Central. In the remain-
ing six divisions the value of cereals varied from about one-fourth to
about one-third of the total value of crops, being 26.2 per cent in the
South Atlantic division and 34.6 per cent in the Mountain division.
Except in the Mountain and Pacific divisions, corn was the most
important of the cereals as measured by value. In the East and
West North Central divisions corn contributed more than one-third
of the value of all crops in 1909 and in the three southern divisions
it was the crop second in importance. Wheat was not first in impor-
* Tkirtemth Census, igio (Washington, 1913), Vol. V, 540-1, 544-6.
DEVELOPMENT OF AGRICULTURE 637
tance in any division, but was second in the West North Central and
Mountain divisions and third in the Pacific division. Oats ranked
third among the several crops in the East North Central and Mountain
divisions. . . .
Hay and forage is an important crop in the North and West, but
not in the South. In four divisions it was the leading crop. In New
England 41.9 per cent of the total value of crops raised in 1909 con-
sisted of the value of hay and forage; in the Mountain division the
proportion was 40.5 per cent, in the Middle Atlantic 31.4 per cent,
and in the Pacific division 26.5 per cent. In the two North Central
divisions the value of hay and forage was relatively less important;
in the East North Central division it ranked second among the crops,
and third in the West North Central division.
Cotton is an important crop only in the three southern divisions;
its value constituted nearly one-half (49.9 per cent) of the total value
of crops in the West South Central division, about two-fifths (40.8
per cent) in the South Atlantic, and over one- third (37.1 per cent)
in the East South Central. Tobacco was the crop third in importance
in the East South Central division.
Vegetables (including potatoes and sweet potatoes and yams)
contributed more than one-fifth (21.5 per cent) of the value of all
crops in New England in 1909 and over one-sixth (17.4 per cent) of
the value of crops in the Middle Atlantic states. In no other division
was the value of vegetables as much as one-tenth of the value of all
crops. Potatoes, considered alone, was the crop second in rank in
New England (forest products of farms being excluded from considera-
tion as scarcely constituting a crop in the usual sense), and vegetables,
excluding potatoes and sweet potatoes and yams, ranked third in
the three divisions along the Atlantic seaboard.
Fruits and nuts contributed more than one-fifth (21.4 per cent)
of the total value of crops in the Pacific division and nearly one-tenth
(9.6 per cent) of the value of crops in the Middle Atlantic division.
The New England and the Mountain divisions are the only others
where the value of fruits and nuts exceeded 5 per cent of the total
value of crops in 1909. The Pacific division was the only one in which
fruits and nuts were among the three leading crops.
Forest products, which are not ordinarily looked upon as a farm
crop, contributed exactly one-eighth of the total value of crops in
New England, and more than 5 per cent of the value of crops in the
South Atlantic and East South Central divisions. Considerable
amounts of these products were reported for every division, but only
638 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
in the three divisions mentioned did they contribute as much as $
per cent of the total value of all crops in 1909. . . .
The acreage of cereals taken as a group, of hay and forage, and
of vegetables taken as a group, is widely though by no means evenly
distributed through the country. Cotton and sugar cane are prac-
tically confined to the South and nearly all the tobacco is raised
east of the Mississippi River. Among the minor crops peanuts and
sweet potatoes and yams are almost entirely, and hemp is very largely,
confined to the South; hops are practically restricted to two divisions,
the Pacific and the Middle Atlantic; flaxseed is mainly confined to
the West North Central division; while the other minor crops are in
most cases largely concentrated in three or four divisions. . . .
When judged by total value of crops raised, Illinois was the most
important agricultural state both in 1909 and in 1899; the total
value of all crops in that state in 1909 was $372,270,000 and in 1899,
$214,833,000. There was only one other state, Iowa, where the total
value of crops raised in 1909 exceeded $300,000,000. In 7 states,
Texas, Ohio, Georgia, Missouri, Kansas, New York, and Indiana,
the total value of crops was between $200,000,000 and $300,000,000.
In 17 other states the value of crops in 1909 exceeded $100,000,000
each.
Among the 26 states having a value of crops in excess of $100,000,-
000 each were all of the 12 states in the two North Central divisions;
2 of the 3 states in the Middle Atlantic; 4 of the 8 in the South At-
lantic; all the 4 in the East South Central; 3 of the 4 in the West
South Central; and i of the 3 in the Pacific, no state in the New
England or in the Mountain division being included in the 26.
The absolute increase between 1899 and 1909 in the value of all
crops produced exceeded $100,000,000 in seven states, namely:
Illinois ($157,438,000), Georgia ($140,250,000), Texas ($131,169,000),
North Dakota ($126,595,000), Iowa ($119,114,000), Nebraska ($103,-
656,000), and Kansas ($101,337,000); it exceeded $10,000,000 in each
of the states of the Middle Atlantic, the East and West North Central,
the East and West South Central, and the Pacific divisions, as well
as in one state in the New England division (Maine) and in four in
the Mountain division; the increase exceeded $1,000,000 in every
state excei)t Rhode Island.
The i)ercentage of increase in the value of all crops between
1899 and 1909 was greatest in Idaho (270.7 per cent); Washington,
with 235.4 per cent, was next, followed in order by North Dakota
(234.3 per cent), Wyoming (219.4 per cent), Oklahoma (205 per cent),
DEVELOPMENT OF AGRICULTURE 639
and Colorado (200.4 per cent). Most of the states with very high
percentages of increase had comparatively small aggregate crop values
in 1899 and show absolute increases that are not exceptionally great.
Georgia, North Dakota, and Nebraska are the only states where the
increase in the value of all crops between 1899 and 1909 exceeded
$100,000,000 and was also more than 100 per cent.
Of the states in the West every one except California shows an
increase in the value of all crops of over joo per cent; of the states
in the South, four on the Atlantic coast (Florida, Georgia, South
Carolina, and North Carolina) and two in the Southwest (Oklahoma
and Arkansas) more than doubled the value of their crops during
the last decade; but of the states in the North only three, North and
South Dakota and Nebraska, show an increase of more than 100 per
cent in the value of their crops. No state in the New England, Middle
Atlantic, or East North Central divisions shows an increase in the
value of crops as great as that for the United States as a whole
(8;^ per cent).
While there was no state reporting a decrease in the total value of
crops in 1909 as compared with 1899, there were 18 states reporting
a decrease in known crop acreage. It may be noted that 9 of the 13
original states are among those reporting losses in crop acreage. Of
the Western states, California is the only one reporting a decrease and
of the Southern states, Virginia, West Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee,
and Maryland reported decreases, while of the Northern states a major-
ity reported decreases in crop acreage, the four states on the western
boundary of the West North Central division (North and South
Dakota, Nebraska, and Kansas) being the only ones in the North
to report a higher percentage of increase in crop acreage than the
United States as a whole. During the decade there was an increase
of over 1,000,000 acres in land devoted to crops in North Dakota,
Oklahoma, South Dakota, Texas, Nebraska, Kansas, Washington,
Georgia, and Colorado. New Mexico reported the highest percentage
of gain, 222.8, followed by North Dakota, Oklahoma, Wyoming,
Washington, and Idaho. In Iowa and in California the loss in acre-
age reported was over 1,500,000, and in New York and Pennsylvania
it exceeded 500,000. In California the increase in the acreage of
fruit and nut crops doubtless in part if not wholly offset the decrease
in crops for which acreage was reported. Besides these 4 states 14
others reported less land in crops for which acreage was reported in
1909 than in 1899. The relative decrease was greatest in California,
followed by New Hampshire, Connecticut, and Massachusetts.
640 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
VII. The Public Domain
Extent and Character, i8q8 ^
Although the frontier line disappeared during the decade 18 70-1 880, there
yet remain millions of acres of public lands. Much of this land is not adapted
to known agricultural methods, but there is reason to believe that as scientific
agriculture progresses more and more of this land will be brought under cultiva-
tion. The extent and character of the public domain in 1898 were described in
an official publication as follows:
There are within the limits of the United States, exclusive of
Alaska and the new island possessions, nearly 573,995,000 acres of
vacant Government land, besides 145,122,000 acres in Indian reser-
vations, forest reserves, national parks, reservoir sites, and mihtary
reservations, or for some other reason reserved from settlement. The
vast area of Alaska, which is very nearly all public land, together with
lesser areas in Hawaii, Puerto Rico, and other new dependencies, will
bring up the total extent of the national domain, exclusive of reser-
vations, to nearly 1,000,000,000 acres. . . .
Future additions to the reservations for permanent forests and
reservoir sites will no doubt diminish the area open to settlers, but
these additions are Ukely to be counterbalanced in whole or in part
by the opening of Indian and military reservations to settlement.
The 1,000,000 acres granted to each of the arid States by the so-called
'* Carey act " will still further reduce the amount of land to be obtained
by settlers directly from the National Government, but doubtless
without reducing the total amount of public land available for settle-
ment. At the present rate of disposal to individuals, the vacant lands
in the United States proper would last for nearly a century. . . .
In the case of land grants in aid of railroad construction, lands
within the limits of the grants are considered "unappropriated and
unreserved" until selected by the grantee, though it is not certain
that the usage of the various land offices is uniform in this respect.
It follows from this mode of classification that to ascertain the amount
of land still available for entry a deduction should be made from the
amount given as "unappropriated and unreserved" to represent that
portion of railroad grants not yet selected by the railroad companies.
While no exact figures are available for this purpose, the General
Land Office estimates the total amount of land granted to aid in
* Yearbook of llu- Diparlmrnt nf AurUuUttrv. iSoS CWashinirton. 1899), 325,
DEVELOPMENT OF AGRICULTURE 641
railroad construction at 156,893,468 acres, and as the amount patented
up to July I, 1898, was but 88,947,862 acres, the remainder is a little
less than 68,000,000 acres. It is, however, very unlikely that patents
will actually issue to the grantees for half that quantity of land, for
some portions of the grants had been appropriated by settlers before
the grants were made, and still larger areas are so mountainous and
barren as to be scarcely worth selecting and patenting. A deduction
of 25,000,000 acres from the area unappropriated and unreserved
would probably be sufficient to cover future patents on account of
railroad land grants. These grants consist of the alternate sections
lying within wide strips of territory crossing the western part of the
United States, and in some cases indemnity land? have been granted
beyond the limits of the original grants. The Northern Pacific Rail-
road grant extends in a band 40 miles wide across Minnesota and 80
miles wide across North Dakota, Montana, the northern end of Idaho,
and Washington; the Union Pacific and Central Pacific Railroad
grants are in a strip 40 miles wide extending from the Missouri River
across Nebraska, southern Wyoming, northwestern Utah, Nevada, and
California, to San Francisco, with branches in Colorado and Kansas
and northward through California and Oregon; the Atlantic and
Pacific and Southern Pacific Railroad grants extend from the Rio
Grande in New Mexico across Arizona and California to San Jose,
with a branch to the southeastern corner of California. There are
also many smaller grants in the more easterly public-land States,
besides several wagon-road grants in Oregon and elsewhere.
PUBLIC LANDS FIT FOR PRODUCTIVE USES
Far more important than the exact area of the public domain
legally open to settlement is the question how much of this public
land is actually fit for cultivation or for other productive uses. Having
regard to present conditions, it must be admitted that all the best
parts of the public domain have been appropriated, and that compara-
tively very little good agricultural land remains open to settlement;
the mineral value of that which remains may be very great, but even
of the mineral deposits it may be said that the most accessible and most
easily worked among them have probably been appropriated. Look-
ing into the future, the question becomes much more difficult, for no
one can tell even approximately how much of the land now lying waste
may be ultimately reclaimed to productive uses. The one thing
needed, as far as concerns the greater part of the 573,995,000 acres
of vacant public land in the United States proper, including nearly
642 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
all west of the ninety-eighth or one hundredth meridian, is an
adequate supply of water; and this applies to much of the mineral
land, as well as to that which it is desired to reclaim for agri-
cultural purposes. Vast tracts of arid land in the Western United
States contain in an unusual degree all the elements of fertility
except water, and with the aid of irrigation could be made to
yield more abundantly than even the best land of the humid regions.
It has been said that ''sagebrush is unerring evidence of kindly soil
and abundant sunshine."
Estimates of the amount of this land which can be irrigated with
the water at command vary greatly, but there is none for the arid
region as a whole more authoritative than those of Maj. J. W. Powell,
formerly Director of the United States Geological Survey, and Mr.
F. H. Newell, chief hydrographer of that Survey. Major Powell
estimated that at least 150,000 square miles, or 96,000,000 acres,
could be economically reclaimed by irrigation within the present
generation; or, as he said before a Congressional committee in 1890,
that about 100,000,000 acres could be reclaimed by the utilization
of perennial streams alone. Mr. Newell places the irrigable amount
at 74,000,000 acres or about 7.6 per cent of the total area of the sixteen
Western public-land States and Territories. This is a very conserv-
ative estimate, in which financial as well as engineering considerations
are taken into account, and it looks not to the remote future, but
only to what is likely to be profitable and therefore practicable within
a generation. Future improvements in irrigation engineering an
methods and discoveries of new underground water supplies, togeth*
with the increasing demand for agricultural products resulting froi
an increasing population, may in the course of time make it profitaM
to irrigate a much larger area; but any attempt to state the ultima 1
extent of irrigation would be only conjecture. The amount of Ian
irrigated in 1889, the latest year for which census figures are available
was in most of the arid States so small in proportion to the estimate
irrigable area as to be almost negligible in a rough calculation, so th;i
it will not be far from the truth to take Mr. Newell's conservati\i
figures as representing the probable future increase of the irrigated
area. But it must be remembered that some part of the lands to 1
reclaimed will probably be lands now in private ownership. Althou^
the area now irrigated is very small as compared with the total irn
gable area, the canals and ditches already constructed take most ( 1
the water which is easily obtainable, and the future development o\
the West depends mainly upon the construction of storage reservoir
DEVELOPMENT OF AGRICULTURE 643
and large canals, or other difficult and expensive undertakings which
are beyond the power of individuals or small groups of individuals.
Much will therefore depend upon the policy adopted for attracting
capital to the irrigation industry. It is evident that the work of
reclamation must be undertaken either by public agencies or by large
corporations.
^^'
CHAPTER XrX
COMMERCE, TRANSPORTATION, AND COMMUNICATION,
i86o-igi5
I. Internal and Foreign Commerce
A. Extent and Growth, 1850-IQOQ *
The growth of the internal and the foreign commerce of the United States since
1850 reflects accurately the economic progress of the country. The extent of
this growth is shown in the following smnmary:
Conservation and commerce are so closely allied and the latter,
commerce, so much affected by the application of the former, conser-
vation, that a very few words on commerce may not be inappropriate
to this discussion of conservation. This seems particularly true in
case the discussion should relate especially to internal commerce,
or the exchanges of our own people among themselves. True, the
foreign commerce of the United States has grown from $3oo,ooo,cxx)
in 1850 to $3,000,000,000 in the fiscal year 1908, being to-day prac-
tically ten times as much as in 1850; while population meantime
was growing from 23,000,000 to 86,000,000, the per capita foreign
commerce thus being $13.71 in 1850 and in the fiscal year 1908, $34.74,
an increase of about 150 per cent in the per capita value of our foreign
commerce. In internal commerce, however, which seems more closely
related to the question of conservation, perhaps because of its greater
importance than the foreign commerce and of its closer relation to
the people in their every-day life — in internal commerce the growth
has been much greater, the internal commerce of the United States
having been valued at $2,000,000,000 in 1850 and over $28,000,000,000
in 1907, being thus practically fourteen times as much in 1907 as in
1850; while the per capita value of the internal commerce, which in 1850
was $86, was in 1907, $315. Thus, while foreign commerce is to-day
ten times as much as in 1850, internal commerce is fourteen times as
much as at that period; and the per capita of the foreign commerce
* Report oj the National Conservation Commission (Washington, 1909), I]«
S7-8.
COMMERCE, TRANSPORTATION, AND COMMUNICATION 645
is now practically three times as great as in 1850, while the per capita
value of the internal commerce is now practically four times as much
as in 1850. The internal commerce of the United States, including
in this term merely a single transaction in all the merchandise form-
ing the exchanges among our own people, was in 1850 practically
seven times as great as the entire foreign commerce, and in 1907
was nine times as great as the entire foreign commerce, and equaled
in value all of the imports plus all of the exports of every nation of
the world.
The measurement of the internal commerce of the United States
is arrived at by a process entirely different from that by which the
foreign commerce is measured. In determining the value of the
foreign commerce, we require from every importer and every exporter
a statement of the true value of the merchandise which he is importing
or exporting, and aggregating these imports of all ports and exports
of all ports we get the grand total of our foreign trade, which in the
fiscal year 1908 aggregated, as already indicated, $3,000,000,000,
against a little more than $300,000,000 in 1850. To measure the
internal commerce of the country is more difficult, however, since
there are no gateways through which it passes and at which a state-
ment of its value may be required. It is possible, however, by a dif-
ferent process to determine the value of the merchandise which passes
from hand to hand for consumption within the United States; and
as statements of foreign commerce include merely the value of the
articles comprising it, the measurement of the internal commerce
by a statement of the value of the articles which it includes, and thus
of a single transaction in those articles, seems to be a logical and fair
one. We may, therefore, assume that if we can determine the value
of the articles which form the internal commerce the measurement
may at least approximate in accuracy the measurement of the for-
eign commerce to which we are more accustomed.
Fortunately, we are able to determine at certain dates in our na-
tional history the value of at least the principal articles entering the
internal commerce of the country. The census shows the value of
manufactures, of agricultural products, the products of the mines,
the fisheries; and the record of imports shows the value of merchan-
dise brought in from foreign countries and subsequently entering the
internal commerce. By aggregating these stated values at the place
of production of the principal articles entering the internal commerce
of the country and adding a reasonable sum as the probable cost of
transporting them to the consumer, we may at least approximate
646 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
the value of the merchandise consumed among our own people, a
single transaction in which may be properly accepted as a measure-
ment of the value of the internal commerce. The census of 1900
showed the value of manufactures in the United States to be $13,000,-
000,000; of products of agriculture, practically $4,000,000,000; and
of minerals, about $1,000,000,000. The importations of 1900 were
practically $1,000,000,000 in value. Adding to these the products
of the forests and fisheries and the increased value of all products
due to transportation from the place of production to the purchaser,
we may fairly set down the value of the internal commerce of the
country as measured by a single transaction in those articles at
$20,000,000,000 in the year 1900.
Applying this method to earlier and more recent years, I find that
the value of the internal commerce of the country may be reasonably
estimated at $2,000,000,000 in 1850, $3,500,000,000 in i860, $5,000,-
000,000 in 1870 (gold value), $7,750,000,000 in 1880, $12,000,000,000
in 1890, $20,000,000,000 in 1900, and $28,000,000,000 in 1907, the
last named year being estimated upon the census figures of manufac-
tures for 1905, the Agricultural Department's estimate of the value
of farm products in 1907, the Geological Survey estimate of the value
of mineral products, and the stated value of imports of that year.
Comparing these with the census figures of population, we get the
per capita value of the internal commerce in 1850, $86; in i860,
$111; in 1870, $132; in 1880, $154; in 1890, $192; in 1900, $261;
and in 1907, $326. Meantime the per capita wealth has grown,
according to the census figures, from $307 in 1850 to $514 in i860;
$780 in 1870; $850 in 1880; $1,039 in 1890; $1,165 in 1900; and
$1,310 in 1904, the latest year for which estimates have been made,
the increase in per capita wealth having been slightly greater than
the increase in per capita of internal commerce.
B. Character of the Internal Trade j i8gg ^
The character of the internal trade of the country in so far as it relates tO
the channels through which the goods are distributed was well put in the Report
of the Industrial Commission as follows:
Increase in the production of goods is not necessarily accompanic
by a corresponding increase in the prosperity of wholesale and retail
trade. Some classes of goods are sold only to large consumers, ai
to a considerable extent go directly from the producer to them
* Final Report of the Industrial Cotfifnis'>!'»! (^^W i^hinjifton, i()02\ Volur
XIX of the Commission's Report, 545-9.
COMMERCE, TRANSPORTATION, AND COMMUNICATION 647
Changes in business methods may tend, and doubtless during recent
years have tended, to increase the proportion of the product which is
thus sold without the intermediary service of independent dealers.
Many other conditions of trade and commerce may change independ-
ently of the general state of productive industry. On the whole,
however, there can be no question that wholesale and retail business
has shared largely in the general advance in prosperity which has
characterized the past three or four years. . . .
One thing is made clear by the investigation of the Industrial
Commission. The importance of the middleman between the pro-
ducer and the retail dealer is diminishing, and in some instances retail
dealers themselves are being displaced by the practice of direct selling
by manufacturers. In the days when manufacturing estabUshments
were for the most part small and when retail stores were likewise
small, it was almost out of the question for the manufacturer and the
retailer to deal directly with one another. The manufacturer would
have had to incur an expense which would be enormous in proportion
to the value of his goods, if he sought to bring them to the notice of
scattered small retail dealers. Most classes of manufactured products
were therefore handled by jobbers or commission men. The jobber
bought goods outright from the manufacturer, assuming the risk
of sale as well as enjoying a considerable part of the profit coming
from fluctuations in the market. The commission dealer acted
rather as an agent of the producer, receiving a percentage upon the
sales which he effected.
At present there seems to be a very marked decline in the jobbing
business and, to a less extent, a decline also in the commission business.
The latter suffers less, because under modern methods goods ordered
through a commission broker can be shipped directly from the pro-
ducer to the retailer or consumer, without the expense of rehandHng
and double freighting, which is usually incurred in the jobbing business.
Both classes of middlemen are, however, to a considerable extent
being displaced. The increase in the size of manufacturing estab-
lishments makes it possible for many producers to maintain regular
selling departments, the expense of which is distributed over so large
a business as to become less than that of employing middlemen. In
some cases manufactures are selling, to a considerable extent, directly
to small consumers without even the aid of retail dealers. Sale
direct from the factory, often by delivery on approval, is increasingly
common, while not a few large manufacturers maintain retail stores
in various cities.
648 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
The practice of making direct sales to retailers or consumers has
been especially common in the case of the great industrial combina-
tions. The Standard Oil Company long ago adopted the system in
most of its markets. The Pittsburg Plate Glass Company, which
has a large control of the plate-glass business in this country, has
established distributing branches which have tended largely to drive
out the jobbers. It is asserted by the officers of the company in this
case that their action was forced by the dictatorial conduct of the
jobbers, who had a national association and endeavored to dictate
to the manufacturers to what jobbers they should sell. In other cases
the elimination of the jobber is merely a matter of evolution, of sim-
plification. One witness, however, who has had large experience in
wholesale business, as well as in the management of various industrial
combinations, points out that producers must exercise great care in
endeavoring to economize by doing away with middlemen. Some
kinds of business permit this method of selling more readily than
others. Especially where goods are sold on the basis of wpular
trade-marks and brands, the method of direct sales to retailers is
likely to prove advantageous.
Another powerful influence which has tended to reduce the im-
p>ortance of the wholesale dealer has been the great increase in the
size of retail establishments in many cases. Department stores buy
goods of many classes, often in exceedingly large quantities, in some
cases purchasing the entire output of mills. Moreover, many stores
dealing in special classes of articles have so developed that their
purchases are on a scale much larger than before. These large
retailers, therefore, tend more and more to deal directly with manu-
facturers, in fact often ordering in advance of actual production the
particular styles which they desire. This latter practice relieves the
manufacturer of risk, minimizing the time between the production
and the consumption of goods. . . .
It is very generally asserted that the consumer benefits largely
by the increased directness of the process by which goods are brought
to him from the manufacturer. The elimination of the middleman
is an elimination of expense. This same tendency to eliminate the
middleman is seen in the handling of agricultural products as well as
of manufactured commodities, and it is probable that a saving to the
entire community has been affected.
Accurate information regarding the extent to which middlemen
have already been displaced can not be secured. One witness asserts
that the number of dry-goods jobbing houses in New York a few
COMMERCE, TRANSPORTATION, AND COMMUNICATION 649
years ago was twenty-eight, and that they have now been reduced
to four, which, while larger than the average of the former estabUsh-
ments, do much less total business than they did. A similar condi-
tion obtains in the Boston dry-goods business. Again, it is said that
the larger part of the cotton goods produced in New Bedford is sold
directly to retailers, although commission houses still do a large busi-
ness in cottons produced in New England.
Somewhat in advance of the movement toward consolidation on
the part of producers came the concentration of retail business in
large stores. The department store, which is really a consoHdation
of smaller stores handling different lines of goods, dates back to the
period immediately following the civil war, and seems to be due to the
changes in the methods of conducting business which developed about
that time. Prices were falling, the margin of profit was growing
smaller, and it became necessary for merchants to turn over their
stocks rapidly. They thus needed larger capital and new sales
methods.
While, from the nature of things, there can not be such concentra-
tion in retail trade as in production or in wholesale trade, and while
for that reason department stores have not multiplied with the same
remarkable rapidity as have industrial combinations, there neverthe-
less seems to be a constant movement toward the concentration of
retail trade, and department stores are to be found in all parts of the
country.
A feature connected with the establishment of such stores, which
has been the subject of more or less complaint, has been the intro-
duction of mail-order departments, by means of which customers
living at a distance, who are unable to avail themselves in person of the
advantages of the department stores, with their large and varied stocks,
are enabled to make purchases by mail.
There can be no doubt that the establishment of the mail-order
system tends to decrease the sales of the local dealer, and that he has
reason to view its growth with a certain degree of apprehension.
Manifestly, there must be somewhat narrow limits to the growth
of the system, since in the case of a very large majority of the lines
of goods carried by department stores, satisfactory purchases are
possible only after personal inspection of the goods. In so far as
the mail-order system exists, however, it must exist because the people
in the small towns can not be served so satisfactorily by their home
stores as they can be by the department stores in the large cities.
The first consideration is doubtless the greatest good to the greatest
6so READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
number, and if customers find the mail-order system of advantage
there is every reason for its continuance. . . .
There seems to be no doubt that the department stores are tending
to eUminate the jobbers, and are, to a considerable extent at least,
crowding out the small retail dealers. There are apparently few-
instances in which the department store has destroyed the business
of the retailers by unfairly lowering prices, only to raise them again
when a monopoly has been secured. In the smaller towns or cities,
where but one department store is to be found, the crowding out of
the small retailers might result in monopoly on the part of the depart-
ment store. In the larger cities, where several department stores
are to be found in competition with each other, there can be no ele-
ment of monopoly in the business, and the success of the department
store must be attributed to the fact that the public finds it more to
its advantage to trade at the large stores than at the smaller stores.
The department store, v*^ith the large capital at its command and with
the large purchases it must necessarily make at one time, is no doubt
able to buy goods at lower prices than the small dealers. Further-
more, if rightly managed, the department store must be able to make
great economies in rent, cost of superintendence, office expenses, and,
possibly, in clerk hire. If these advantages are shared with the public,
the result must of necessity be lower prices and consequent benefit.
In the absence of monopoly, which in general seems to be the situa-
tion to-day, the establishment of department stores must be regarded
as being on the whole advantageous to the consuming public.
It is perhaps not so easy to determine what has been their effect
ujx)n labor. The representatives of the department stores and of
the small stores appear to hold antipodal opinions on this point.
The representatives of the department stores, on the one hand, claim
that the establishment of the large stores has resulted in the reduction
of prices, has thereby stimulated consumption, and therefore in-
creased employment, both in the manufacture of goods and in their
distribution, and that more than the total number of competent
persons thrown out of employment in the small stores by the compe-
tition of department stores are given employment in the department
stores themselves. They assert further that wages are also higher
and hours of labor fewer in the department stores than in the small
stores; that an employee in a large department store may easily hold
a more important position than if working for himself; and that
employees, instead of having their individuality destroyed by em-
ployment in the department store, frequently identify themselves
COMMERCE, TRANSPORTATION, AND COMMUNICATION 651
with the interests of the concern and take pride in the estabhshment.
The small dealers, on the other hand, claim that fewer people are now
employed and that wages have been very much reduced through the
establishment of department stores. There has not been sufficient
statistical investigation to make it possible to determine the com-
parative value of these conflicting opinions in respect to the effect of
the department stores on employment and on wages.
Some department stores may be guilty of fraudulent advertising,
but this does not seem to be an inherent quality of the department
store, but to depend rather on the character of the men in charge,
and is to be found in connection with the small stores as well as with
the large stores.
II. The Merchant Marine
A. American and Foreign Vessels in the Carrying Trade of the United
States, 1860-igio ^
The extent to which American vessels engaged in the foreign trade of this
country is indicated below.
I. Foreign Carrying Trade of the United States, 1860-1910
i860.
1865.
1870.
1875-
1880.
1885.
1890.
1895.
1900.
1905-
1910.
Year
In Cars
and Other
Land
Vehicles
$ 20,388,235
20,981,393
45,332,775
73,571,263
83,104,742
154,895,650
242,265,329
319,132,528
In American
Vessels
$507,247,757
167,402,872
352,969,401
314,257,792
258,346,577
194,865,743
202,451,086
170,507,196
195,084,192
290,607,946
260,837,147
In Foreign
Vessels
$ 255,040,793
437,010,124
638,927,488
884,788,517
1,224,265,434
1,079,518,566
1,371,116,744
1,285,896,192
1,894,444,424
2,103,201,462
2,721,962,475
Per Cent
Carried in
American
Vessels
66.5
27.7
35-6
^ Annual Report of the Commissioner of Navigation, 191 2 (Washington, 191 2),
194-6.
652
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
2. Tonnage of American and Foreign Vessels Entered and Cleared in
THE Foreign Trade of the United States, i 860-1910
i860.
1865.
1870.
1875-
1880.
1885.
1890.
1895.
1900.
1905
1910.
Year
American
12,087,209
5,968,795
6,992,967
7,310,589
6,834,319
6,363,567
8,149,878
8,977,057
12,344,570
14,283,632
17,697,062
Per Cent
71
47
38
30
19
21
23
23
22
23
22
Foreign
4,977,916
6,812,090
11,332,095
16,278,728
29,^19,229
24,456,029
28,106,245
30,068,404
44,099,576
47,857,126
62,244,602
Per Cent
29
53
62
70
81
79
77
77
78
77
78
B. American Vessels Engaged in Commerce ^ 1860-1914 ^
During the Civil War the tonnage of American vessels engaged in foreign
commerce decreased almost 40 per cent, that engaged in coastwise trade (not
including the Great Lakes) increased more than 20 per cent, while the tonnage
engaged in lake commerce increased approximately 50 per cent. Between 1865
and 1911 the tonnage of the first decreased from more than 1,500,000 to less than
1,000,000; the second increased from 2,800,000 to about 3,500,000; while the
third increased from 450,000 to a little more than 2,000,000. The most significant"
fact, therefore, about the tonnage of American vessels has been the absolute decline C
in that engaged in foreign trade and the increase of that along the coast and on the/
Great Lakes.
American Tonnage, 1860-1910
Engaged in Foreign
Engaged in
Engagaged in
Year
Trade and
Whale Fisheries
Cod and Mackerel
Fisheries «
Commerce of the
Great Lakes
i860
2,546,237
1,602,583
1,516,800
2,339,857
2,820,502
2,045,003
467,774
673,697
684,704
1865.. .
1870. .
1875- •
1,553,827
2,462,014
837,891
1880..
1,352,810
2,110,122
605,102
1885..
1,287,998
2,227,988
749,948
1890 . .
946,69s
2,414,739
1.063,063
1895..
838,186
2,556,315
1,241,459
1900. .
826,694
2,772,558
1,565,587
1905..
954,513
3,439,883
2,062,147
IQIO. .
791,825
3.821,155
2,895,102
I914..
1,076,152
3,962,141
2,882,932
* Statistical Abstract. (See Index, Commerce, etc.)
* Exclusive of the commerce of the Great Lakes.
COMMERCE, TRANSPORTATION, AND COMMUNICATION 653
C. President McKinley on the Merchant Marine, iSgg ^
Since the Civil War the merchant marine of the United States has been on a
decUne. In i860 about two-thirds ojjthe commerce iifjthis^xountry was carried
in American vessels; by 1910 it had declined to less than one-tenth. In 1899 Presi-
dent McKinley called attention to the state of affairs as fpllowsT™
The value of an American merchant marine to the extension of
our commercial trade and the strengthening of our power upon the
sea invites the immediate action of the Congress. Our national
development will be one-sided and unsatisfactory so long as the
remarkable growth of our inland industries remains unaccompanied
by progress on the seas. There is no lack of constitutional authority
for legislation which shall give to the country maritime strength
commensurate with its industrial achievements and with its rank
among the nations of the earth.
The past year has recorded exceptional activity in our shipyards,
and the promises of continual prosperity in shipbuilding are abun-
dant. Advanced legislation for the protection of our seamen has
been enacted. Our coast trade, under regulations wisely framed at
the beginning of the Government and since, shows results for the past
fiscal year unequaled in our records or those of any other power.
We shall fail to realize our opportunities, however, if we complacently
regard only matters at home and blind ourselves to the necessity of
securing our share in the valuable carrying trade of the world.
Last year American vessels transported a smaller share of our
exports and imports than during any former year in all our history,
and the measure of our dependence upon foreign shipping was pain-
fully manifested to our people. Without any choice of our own, but
from necessity, the Departments of the Government charged with
military and naval operations in the East and West Indies had
to obtain from foreign flags merchant vessels essential for those
operations.
The other great nations have not hesitated to adopt the required
hieans to develop their shipping as a factor in national defense and as
one of the surest and speediest means of obtaining for their producers
a share in foreign markets. Like vigilance and effort on our part
cannot fail to improve our situation, which is regarded with humilia-
tion at home and with surprise abroad. Even the seeming sacrifices,
which at the beginning may be involved, will be offset later by more
than equivalent gains.
^ Messages and Papers of the Presidents. Edited by James D. Richardson
([Washington], 1896-1903), X, 134-5-
654 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
The expense is as nothing compared to the advantage to be
achieved. The reestablishment of our merchant marine involves
in a large measure our continued industrial progress and the extension
of our commercial triumphs. I am satisfied the judgment of the
country favors the policy of aid to our merchant marine, which will
broaden our commerce and markets and upbuild our sea-carrying
capacity for the products of agriculture and manufacture; which,
with the increase of our Navy, mean more w^ork and wages to our
countrymen, as well as a safeguard to American interests in every
part of the world.
D. A Plea for Ship Subsidy, igoi ^
President Roosevelt, in his first message to Congress (December 3, 1901),
called attention to the state of the merchant marine of the United States and
suggested that the government take some action whereby this branch of industry
should be restored.
The condition of the American merchant marine is such as to call
for immediate remedial action by the Congress. It is discreditable
to us as a Nation that our merchant marine should be utterly insig-
nificant in comparison to that of other nations which we overtop in
other forms of business. We should not longer submit to conditions
under which only a trifling portion of oiu* great commerce is carried
in our own ships. To remedy this state of things would not merely
serve to build up our shipping interests, but it would also result in
benefit to all who are interested in the permanent establishment of
a wider market for American products, and would provide an auxiliary
force for the Navy. Ships work for their own countries just as rail-
roads work for their terminal points. Shipping lines, if established
to the principal countries with which we have dealings, would be of
political as well as commercial benefit. From every standpoint it is
unwise for the United States to continue to rely upon the ships of
competing nations for the distribution of our goods. It should be
made advantageous to carry American goods in American-built ships.
At present American shipping is under certain great disadvantages
when put in competition with the shipping of foreign countries. Many
of the fast foreign steamships, at a speed of fourteen knots or above,
are subsidized; and all our ships, sailing vessels and steamers alike,
cargo carriers of slow speed and mail carriers of high speed, have to
meet the fact that the original cost of building American ships is greater
» Messages and Papers of the Presidents. Edited by James D. Richardson
( [Washington], 1896-1903), X, 429-30.
COMMERCE, TRANSPORTATION, AND COMMUNICATION 655
than is the case abroad; that the wages paid American officers and
seamen are very much higher than those paid the officers and
seamen of foreign competing countries; and that the standard of
living on our ships is far superior to the standard of Uving on the ships
of our commercial rivals.
Our Government should take such action as will remedy these
inequalities. The American merchant marine should be restored
to the ocean.
III. Commerce on the Great Lakes,
A. Interlake and Local Traffic, igoo ^
An interesting account of the lake traffic in 1899 is found in the Report of
the Industrial Commission, The following extract from the Report deals with
the principal ports, tonnage and seasons of navigation.
The traffic from one lake to another is recorded in such a manner
as to show the relation between Lake Superior and the other lakes.
It thus appears that the greater proportion of the freight moves be-
tween Lake Superior and Lake Erie; 86 per cent of the east-bound
tonnage passing through the Sault Ste. Marie canals was bound for
Lake Erie ports in 1900, and nearly 96 per cent of the west-bound
tonnage originated at Lake Erie ports and was destined for Lake
Superior ports.
MOVEMENT OF EAST AND WEST BOUND FREIGHT
East Bound
From Lake Superior ports to: Net tons
Lake Michigan ports 2,054,819
Lake Huron ports 659,405
Lake Erie ports 17,604,773
Lake Ontario ports 213,496
Total 20,532,493
West Bou-iid
To Lake Superior from lower lake ports: Net tons
Lake Michigan ports 73>84i
Lake Huron ports i30)333
Lake Erie ports 4,890,938
Lake Ontario ports 15,468
Total 5,110,580
^ Final Report of the Industrial Commission (Washington, 1902), Volume
XIX of the Commission's Report 468-70.
656 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
Local traflSc on the Great Lakes is comparatively undeveloped,
with the exception of the traffic on Lake Michigan and Lake Erie.
Nearly the whole of the commerce moved is carried from one end of
the system to the other. About four-fifths of the iron ore mined in
the Lake Superior region is transported to Lake Erie ports, and nearly
the whole of the remaining fifth is taken to Milwaukee and Chicago.
The local traffic on Lake Michigan consists mainly in the cross-lake
traffic of the railroads having termini on both sides. The cars are
loaded bodily on car ferries and taken across from one side to the other.
Manitowoc, Milwaukee, Kewaunee, Menominee, Marinette, and
Gladstone on the western side, and Frankfort, Ludington, Muskegon,
and Ottawa Beach on the eastern side, enjoy the most of this traffic.
Lake Michigan is the only lake that is open to navigation all the year.
In point of local traffic the southern shores of Lake Erie have de-
veloped package freight lines between themselves and Buffalo at the
one end and Detroit at the other. The fastest steamers on this body
of water connect Cleveland with the above terminal ports. For a
long time lake passenger and packet lines were successfully operated
in competition with railroads, but such is not now the case. Such
traffic is chiefly conducted by steamship lines in intimate relations
with or under the control of the railroad lines. These are really
collectors and distributors of freight, acting as an extension of the scope
of railroad territory. Most, if not all, of the trunk lines have their
lines of steamships which make regular connections with upper lake
IX)rts and with the terminal ports on the lower lake shores.
On Lake Michigan, centering at Milwaukee and Chicago and points
farther north on both coasts, for the whole year round local traffic
is carried on in connection with the railroads. Constant communi-
cation between the east and the west coasts is maintained in spite
of ice by steam-driven car floats, constructed so as to break their way,
even in the coldest weather.
The main movements of traffic occur between the upper lake
ports on the one hand and the lower lake ports, south of the St. Clair
River, notably Detroit, Toledo, Cleveland, Ashtabula, Conneaut,
Erie, and Buffalo, on the other. . . .
The season of lake navigation is about eight months in length.
It usually opens in the latter part of April and closes in the early part
or about the middle of December. Movements from the upper
lakes are dej^endent on the opening of the connecting straits. The
Straits of Mackinac are usually covered with ice during the closed
season of navigation and freight movements from Chicago, Mil-
COMMERCE, TRANSPORTATION, AND COMMUNICATION 657
waukee, and other Lake Michigan points are detained until the pros-
pect of passing the straits is practically assured in the spring. From
Lake Superior points southward to the lower lakes the season of navi-
gation opens and closes with the opening and closing of the Sault
Ste. Marie Canal.
Nearly all the commodities handled on the lakes may be classed
under the head of raw materials. The chief articles of traffic from
the upper lakes eastward are flour and grain, iron ore, and lumber.
Westward the traffic is primarily coal, salt, and general merchandise.
Owing largely to the small number of articles which can be handled
in bulk rapidly, and of which a large amount enters into trade at a
few points, the traffic operations on the lakes have been developed
in a manner found in no other part of the world. In the first place,
the size of vessels has been greatly enlarged in order to carry a greater
bulk at lower cost per unit. Secondly, the terminal facihties for han-
dling these leading articles have all been enlarged and improved by
mechanical equipments, making it possible to load and unload rapidly
and therefore to increase the number of trips which a vessel may make
between ports in a season. To these causes more than any other
is to be attributed the rapid development of the shipping on the lakes
and the traffic movements that have called the tonnage into existence.
B. Recent Development, 18 Qo- 1 gog^
The development of the lake traffic since i860 has been due primarily to the
large eastbound shipments of ore and grain. To what extent this traffic has
grown is shown by the following report:
The principal characteristics of Lake commerce are the prepon-
derance of eastbound over westbound shipments and the fact that
the traffic is mainly in a few commodities — iron ore, grain, coal, and
lumber. There is a considerable movement of miscellaneous and
package freight, both local and through, but it is small compared with
the enormous bulk-freight traffic in the crude products of contiguous
mines, forests, and grain fields.
Through traffic constitutes the greater part of the total freight
movement. The main course of this lies between the western ex-
tremity of Lake Superior and the southern shore of Lake Erie.
The Lake traffic was not reported as a whole prior to 1889, when,
according to the Census, the domestic traffic amounted to 25,266,974
net tons. The domestic traffic amounted to 45,000,000 tons in 1901,
^ Report of the National Conservation Commission (Washington, 1909), II,
37-9.
6s8 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
and in 1907 to more than 80,000,000 (shipments 83,507,000 and
receipts 81,124,000 net tons).
Iron ore and coal form by far the greater part of the Lake
traffic, and furnish together 98 per cent of the total increase from
1905 to 1907. The movement of lumber during these years has
declined in importance; other traffic, outside of ore and coal, has
remained about stationary.
Since 1890 with the development of the Lake Superior mines,
the United States has taken first rank among the world's iron pro-
ducers. Of the total domestic production of iron ore, approximately
80 per cent was transported by way of the Great Lakes (41,000,000
net tons in 1906 and 45,500,000 net tons in 1907), constituting in some
years more than half of the total domestic Lake traffic.
Next in volume to iron ore, and first in the westbound Lake
traffic, is the westbound movement of coal. This was over 21,000,000
tons in 1907, representing about a fourth of the domestic I^ake traffic.
In the movement of flour and grain (eastbound) there is active
competition between the Lake and all-rail routes, and with the de-
cline in export trade the domestic movement on the Lakes has
remained practically stationary in recent years, at about 150,000,000
bushels of grain and 1,300,000 tons of flour. There has been an in-
crease of traffic from American ports to Canada and also between
Canadian ports.
The traffic in logs and lumber is decreasing in volimie and still
more in relative importance. Nevertheless, it still constitutes one of
the leading items.
Some of the less important forms of traffic are the movement of
copper, salt, pig iron, and package and miscellaneous freight. About
100,000 tons of copper ore are annually shipped, mainly from the
copper district in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. Salt is shipj^ed
by Lake in considerable quantities from Manistee and Ludington,
Mich., and in smaller quantities from Buffalo and other points. Pig
iron moves in small lots between a considerable number of ports.
Package and miscellaneous freight forms about a tenth of the total
traffic.
Lake Superior shows the largest volume of shipments of any of
the Great Lakes, domestic shipments aggregating over 40,000,000
tons in 1906. About 65 per cent of the total traffic of the Lakes
passes in or out of Lake Superior through St. Marys Falls canals.
Lake Erie has the largest receipts (43,600,000 tons in 1906 and 47,000,-
000 in 1907 in the domestic traffic), is second in volume of shipments
COMMERCE, TRANSPORTATION, AND COMMUNICATION 659
(18,450,000 tons in 1906), and has the largest proportion of the total
traffic. Lake Michigan ranks third, but has the largest amount of
local traffic.
Notwithstanding the large number of Lake ports, about a dozen
ship and receive 80 per cent of the water-borne traffic. Duluth-
Superior is the most important port for shipments and has the largest
water-borne traffic of any of the Lake ports, aggregating over 29,000,-
000 tons in 1906, mainly ore, grain, and coal. Chicago and Milwaukee
are among the leading ports, both for shipments and receipts. The
Lake commerce of Chicago amounts to about 10,000,000 tons annually,
and that of Milwaukee to 6,000,000 tons. Buffalo and Cleveland
are also ports of first importance, both in the volume and in the variety
of their commerce, and Buffalo has the largest receipts of any of the
Lake ports. The Lake commerce of Buffalo for 1906 exceeded
15,500,000 tons (domestic traffic 14,345,000 tons), and, including
canal traffic, the total water-borne commerce of Buffalo was over
17,320,000 tons. The Lake commerce of Cleveland for 1906 was
12,247,000 tons (domestic traffic 11,670,000 tons). Other important
but more specialized ports include Two Harbors, Ashland, and Mar-
quette, on Lake Superior, and Escanaba, on Lake Michigan, for ship-
ments of ore; Toledo, Ashtabula, Lorain, Conneaut, and Erie, on
Lake Erie, for receipts of ore and shipments of coal, and Tonawanda
for receipts of lumber.
IV. Rail and River Traffic
A. Growth of Railroad Systems to igoo ^
The most important railroad development during the past generation has been
in the direction of consolLdation. Before the Civil War American railroads were
short and disconnected, and continued to be so until as late^s j88o. This was
the period of railroad extension. Many miles were laid down by numerous inde-
pendent builders, with little regard for those Unes already built. The next stage
was one of consolidation, in which the guiding hand was that of the capitalist and
not that of the builder or promoter. The extent of this consolidation down to the
year 1900 is given by the Industrial Commission as follows:
FIRST PERIOD — TO 1870
The development of American railroad systems down to 1898, as
judged by magnitude alone, may be roughly divided into three periods.
In the first — that is, down to 1870 — a few hundred miles in length
^ Find Report of the Industrial Commission (Washington, 1902), Volume XIX
of the Commission's Report, 304-6.
66o READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
constituted the maximum for efficient operations. The Illinois
Central, with 700 miles of line, was long considered one of the greatest
railroads in the world. Until after the civil war there was only one
road with a length aggregating more than 1,000 miles. This growth
began early in the fifties, at which time the Pennsylvania system first
surpassed 500 miles in length, and in 1853 to 1858, when the New York
Central nucleus was formed by the consolidation of some sixteen
independent corporations. In the territory west of Chicago the
Chicago and Northwestern road operated but 119 miles in 1859, a
figure which rose to upward of 500 in 1866. The inconvenience, both
for freight and passenger traffic, incident to these small systems is
of course obvious. It is stated that, for instance, a journey from
New York to the Mississippi in the fifties involved not less than
seven bodily transfers from one car to another.
SECOND PERIOD — 1870-1890
The second period in the growth of consolidation extended to
about 1890, at which time 5,000 miles represented about the maximum
length of a single railroad in the United States. The Pennsylvania
road had grown to about 4,000 miles in length by 1880. The absorp-
tion of the Nickel Plate road by the Lake Shore and Michigan South-
ern in 1882, followed by absorption of the West Shore road by the
New York Central in 1885, very considerably increased the length of
systems under common control. In the West the Chicago and North-
western road had grown by 1886 to about 3,500 miles, to which was
added some 1,500 miles by the control of the Chicago, St. Paul, Minne-
apolis and Omaha, and the Fremont and Elkhorn roads. By i88(;
the Union Pacific road owned 2,000 miles of line, but controlled nearl}-
4,000 more. It is difficult to determine whether the enactment of
the act to regulate commerce produced any efifect upon this growth
of large systems. Upon the one hand it appears, from investigation
by the Interstate Commerce Commission itself, that consolidation
was rather lessened after 1887 as compared with preceding years.
Thus, from their data it appears that an average of twenty-seven
companies per year were consolidated in 1886, 1887, and 1888, as
compared with eighty-six companies annually consolidated in 1880,
1881, and 1882. On the other hand, judged by mileage, 1880 wit-
nessed a consolidation of about 4,000 miles, followed in 1889 by
6,600 miles, and in 1890 by about 3,000 miles of line. It docs not
appear from this evidence that any specific influence was immedi-
ately traceable. Judgment should be based upon a considerable term
COMMERCE, TRANSPORTATION, AND COMMUNICATION 66i
of years, in order to eliminate the direct effect of prosperity or de-
pression in any case.
THIRD PERIOD — 1890-1898
The decade after 1890 for the first time witnessed the growth
of systems aggregating as high as 10,000 miles under single control.
The Pennsylvania road rapidly increased its mileage to upward of
7,000, for example. The interchange of business at Chicago between
trunk lines and the Western system had already begun to foreshadow
alliances covering both territories. Typical of these were the close
working agreements between the Vanderbilt system and the Chicago
and Northwestern and the Union Pacific in the Far West. The
growth in size of the roads, for purposes of operation at least, although
not all of them were necessarily consolidated, is shown by the following
statement: In 1867, one road alone exceeded 1,000 miles, constituting
about 7 per cent of the total mileage of the country. Ten years later,
in 1877, II roads exceeded this figure, constituting 20 per cent of the
mileage. In 1887, 28 companies, with 44 per cent of the mileage of
the United States, were over 1,000 miles in length; and in 1896, 44
companies, or 56.9 per cent of the mileage, exceeded this size. In
1900 over 60 per cent of the mileage of the United States was included
in systems larger than 1,000 miles. This statement illustrates the
rapid development which took place after 1890. A comparison of
1880 with 1900 shows that in the former year there were 2,085 railroad
companies in existence, either operated independently or under lease,
aggregating 93,000 miles in length. In June, 1900, the mileage had
more than doubled, with a total number of 2,023 corporations; but
of these only 847 were independently operated, the rest being either
leased or subsidiary.
It is significant as bearing upon the growth of railroad systems
that the period of depression of 1 893-1 897 retarded for some years
the progress of its development. More than this, several important
systems were dismembered as a result of the reorganizations effected
during that period. Thus, for instance, the Atchison road lost the
St. Louis and San Francisco; and the Union Pacific system lost the
Oregon Short Line. In fact, the latter road was entirely dismembered.
The Erie Railroad alone, among the important ones which were sub-
ject to reorganization, was able to resist the disrupting tendency of
financial readjustments. The low-water mark in consolidation oc-
curred in 1898, when only 174 miles were actually consolidated, though
others were merged or leased. The entire reorganization of such
662 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
roads as the Richmond and West Point Terminal opened the way
to the formation of newer and more important systems, such as the
Southern Railway, in the subsequent years. This latter has, for ex-
ample, at the present time absorbed almost forty minor corporations
in a system aggregating between 6,000 and 7,000 miles.
THE CONSOLIDATIONS OF 1 898 TO 190O
General Description
Since the return of prosperity in 1898, railroad consolidation upon
a scale hitherto unequalled has been under way. The earlier systems,
which during the nineties rose to a maximum of 10,000 miles of line,
have now been superseded by the organization of systems under com-
mon control which include from 15,000 to 20,000 miles apiece. The
extent of this movement may be judged from the statement of the
Interstate Commerce Commission that ''disregarding mere rumors
and taking account of well authenticated statements, there were
absorbed in various ways between July i, 1899, and November i,
1900, 25,311 miles of railroad. There are in the whole United States
something less than 200,000 miles of road; more than one-eighth of
this entire mileage was, within the above period, brought in one wa\-
and another under the control of other lines." Since the ist of Novem-
ber, 1900, this rate of consolidation has been still further exceeded,
while at the same time the character of the changes has become notice-
ably different. Forces are apparently at work which may within
the immediate future bring the railroad system of the United States
under the control of comparatively few dominating financial interests.
It is highly important that the character of this change should be
thoroughly understood, inasmuch as it involved not alone the con-
solidation of hitherto independent railroads, but the amalgamation
of entire systems.
B. Freight Rates ^ i8jo-igoo ^
In 1900 the average charge by the railroads for hauling a ton of freight one
mile was less than one cent. There were, however, considerable differences in
freight rates. Some localities had cheaper rates than other localities. Bulky
articles like coal paid iess freight proportionally than such articles as groceries,
provisions, etc. There were other differences of a like nature.
It is incontrovertible, as shown by many witnesses before the
Industrial Commission, and by other authority, that freight rates
• Pinal Report of tir Industrial Commission (Washington, 1902), Volume
XIX of the Commission's Report, 274-6; 278-81.
COMMERCE, TRANSPORTATION, AND COMMUNICATION 663
have declined very greatly, throughout the United States since the
close of the civil war. On the other hand, it does not appear that
any such corresponding reduction in passenger rates either in amount
or extent has taken place in the same period. In respect to freight
rates this may be shown in either one of two ways, either by compari-
son of the actual rates charged for specified service between given
points throughout a series of years, or, secondly, by means of what
is called the revenue per ton per mile. The latter is more commonly
used as a basis for comparison and has many advantages. The
revenue per ton per mile for a given road, or for the railroad sys-
tems of the United States, is computed by dividing the total freight
revenue for that service, whatever it may be, by the number repre-
senting the amount of freight in tons hauled one mile. Thus, for
example, if the total freight revenue of a system of roads be $900,000,-
000, this having been received as compensation for hauling an equiv-
alent of 90,000 million tons of freight one mile, the compensation
actually received for each ton hauled one mile, is obviously one
cent. All that is necessary in order to compute the average revenue
per ton-mile then is to know the total freight revenue and the amount
of ton-mileage service. Computed in this way the average revenue per
ton per mile for the railroads of the United States in 1900 was 0.729
cent. For 1890 this average revenue per ton-mile — that is to say,
the average amount received for each ton of freight hauled one mile —
was 0.941 cent. For 1880 it was 1.232 cents, and for 1870 1.889
cents. . . .
This mode of comparison by means of the revenue per ton-mile
has, as will be observed, one great advantage. It measures the actual
return received by the railroads without regard to the published tariff,
measuring accurately, therefore, the degree to which such departures
from such published rates took place. On the other hand, the aver-
age revenue per ton-mile is open to all the objections of a statistical
average. It does not represent, either for any railroad by itself or
for a system of railroads, the actual payment made for any given
service. It covers all kinds of traffic, both through and local, as
well as of high and low grade; that is to say, it makes no distinction
between service rendered in the transportation of dry goods between
local stations and of coal or grain hauled for long distances. Obvi-
ously, therefore, it will vary from year to year, or as between different
roads, according to the proportions of traffic of different kinds which
may happen to prevail at that time. Even on a given road the
revenue per ton-mile varies widely as between different classes of
664 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
commodities. Thus on the Illinois Central Railroad for the fiscal
year 1900 the revenue per ton-mile was 0.136 cent on wheat, 0.790
cent on flour, 4.267 cents on sugar cane, 0.309 cent on soft coal, 1.148
cents on stone and sand, 2.238 cents on furniture, 3.165 cents on
merchandise. The average of all commodities carried on this road
being 0.935 cent, the latter figure, compounded of such various ingre-
dients, really represents the return for no one of any of the services
performed. The same objection to comparisons of revenue per ton-
mile holds good as between different roads. Thus, for example, the
revenue per ton-mile on a road whose traffic is largely of low grade
will be necessarily low. On the Baltimore and Ohio, for instance,
for 1899 it averaged 0.39 cent for all the traffic that road carried.
This is the lowest average reported by any large railroad system in
the United States for that year, except the Chesapeake and Ohio,
on which the average ton-mile revenue was 0.362 cent. The reason
for this is obviously because the bulk of the tonnage on these roads
consists of soft coal, grain, brick, sand, and other commodities on which
the freight charges must necessarily be exceedingly low in order that
the freight shall move at all. To compare this revenue per ton per
mile with a similar figure for a high grade road, such as the New York,
New Haven and Hartford, which in 1899 reports a revenue per ton per
mile of 1. 41 1 cents, is obviously misleading and fallacious. It does
not mean that the latter road necessarily charged more for the same
service than the Chesapeake and Ohio. Its higher revenue per ton
of freight moved one mile is due in large measure to the fact that
much of its tonnage is of high-class merchandise.
The proportion of local to through business up)on a railroad or
for a system of roads is also an important consideration in determin-
ing the average revenue per ton-mile. Obviously it costs much more
to handle local business, the terminal expenses being far greater in
proportion, while at the same time a larger proportion of the freight
moves in small lots at less than carload rates. As illustrative of the
difference in revenue to the railroads, the Illinois Central Railroad in
1900 reports an average revenue per ton-mile on through freight of
0.48 cent, while for local freight the corresponding figure is 1.17 cents,
the average of both being 0.56 cent. Similarly, uj^on the Lake Shore
and Michigan Southern, the revenue per ton mile for through and
local business is, respectively, 0.417 cent and 0.562 cent, giving an
average of 0.49 cent. It is apparent from this that any accurate
determination of the rate of charge in general must take account of
such facts as these. The Southern Pacific or the Chesapeake and
COMMERCE, TRANSPORTATION, AND COMMUNICATION 665
Ohio railroads, with very Httle local traffic and a business dependent
for prosperity almost entirely upon the long haul, will conduct trans-
portation at a materially different figure from roads in densely settled
territory. This factor, probably, determines to some degree the
difference in average rates per ton mile for different sections of the
United States, and certainly it appears in any comparisons with
European countries. For New England in 1899 the average revenue
per ton mile was 1.14 cents; for the Middle States, 0.57 cent; for the
Central and Northern States, 0.8 cent; the Southern Atlantic, 0.68
cent; Gulf and Mississippi, 0.80 cent; Southwestern, 1.02 cents;
Northwestern, 0.98 cent, and Pacific roads, 1.03 cents.
The considerations above mentioned are of the utmost importance
in any comparison of freight rates, either at different periods or as
between different countries. Without knowing the proportions of
local and through business, and especially the proportion of high and
low grade freight moved long distances, no validity whatever attaches
to comparisons of average revenue per ton mile. The development
of the last twenty years in the United States has been in favor of a
great increase in low-grade traffic. . . .
The assertion is frequently made that, while there has been un-
doubtedly a progressive decrease in freight rates in the United States
during the last thirty years, these decreases have been very unequally
distributed. In other words, it has been maintained that the de-
creased rates have been entirely abnormal upon the through business
from interior centres, such as the movement of grain or other food
supplies from Chicago to the seaboard; but that, on the other hand,
local rates have decreased very little, if at all, in the same period.
Coupled with this is the allegation that while through freight rates
in the United States are lower than in foreign countries, local rates for
short distances are, as a matter of fact, considerably above those pre-
vailing in Europe. This allegation if true is of profound significance,
owing to the fact that the larger proportion of freight business through-
out the country is of a local character. Thus, for instance, the annual
report for 1899 of the New York Central indicates about 4,000,000
tons of through freight in both directions as against five times that
volume of way freight in both directions. On the Pennsylvania road
it appears that the proportion of local freight was even higher, rising
to 90 per cent in 1890. On the Illinois Central for 1900 local freight
outweighs through freight in the proportion of 5 to i, some 84 per
cent of the freight carried being of a local character. On the other
hand on some roads — such as the Chesapeake and Ohio, for instance
666 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
— the opposite extreme is found, competitive freight constituting
about four-fifths of the total. It is certain that the definition of local
as distinct from through freight differs upon various systems. On
the other hand, while the volume is greater, actual earnings on
through business vastly preponderate. Fewer tons are moved, but
the distances are so much greater that the total charge on each ton
aggregates a larger amount. Thus on the New York Central road
through freight earning outweighed the way business from a revenue
point of view three times over. Through ton mileage aggregated
nearly eight times that of local traffic, although at a ton-mile revenue
of considerably less than half. The only point to be established here
is that local freight rates are of great importance, both to the public
from the point of view of rates and to the railroads from the point
of view of revenue.
The trend of testimony appears to be that such local rates have
decreased very unevenly in different parts of the country. Appar-
ently one of the first and most beneficent results of the enactment
of the act to regulate commerce, in 1887, was a reduction of local
rates in various parts of the country, in order to bring the rate adjust-
ment into conformity with the long and short haul clause. This
was peculiarly the case in the Northeastern or trunk-line territory.
It does not seem to have occurred in the Southern States, where the
long and short haul principle has never been accepted in its entirety.
The most comprehensive report upon the subject concludes that
local rates have in various parts of the country, during the last ten
or fifteen years, been reduced from 10 to 50 per cent. Returns from
various State railroad commissions interrogated by the Industrial
Commission upon the subject show highly variable results. From
Mississippi it appears that ''local freight rates in this State have been
materially lowered in the last four years, especially in the lettered
classes," while from the adjoining State of Alabama it appears that
"local rates on freight have decreased very little in the last five or
six years, and have not decreased in proportion to the decrease made
in interstate rates." In New England comparison of actual freight
rates does not indicate any very considerable reduction, the absence
of competition in this section being, perhaps, in part responsible
for this result. A comparison of published freight rates in Southern
territory, without making allowance for departures from such tariffs,
apparently shows a very much smaller reduction than in other parts
of the country. It is also apparently true that the reduction of cotton
rates in this section, while considerable, has been much less rapid
COMMERCE, TRANSPORTATION, AND COMMUNICATION 667
than that of the rates upon grain from Chicago to the seaboard in
either direction. . . .
Summarizing, we may conclude that during the period from
1870 to 1900, on the whole, a substantial and very widespread reduc-
tion of freight rates has taken place. This, as might be expected,
has been far less marked in local than in through or competitive busi-
ness. This steady downward movement of freight rates has appar-
ently been interrupted but once by any attempt at a general advance
of rates. The railroads of the country in 1894 evinced a concerted
disposition to increase freight rates, apparently to compensate for the
depressed condition of the industry as a whole. The times, however,
did not warrant such action and it apparently did not operate to pre-
vent the continued fall in the average revenue per ton-mile. It re-
mained for the prosperous times of 1900 and 1901 to invite once more
such action on their part, and a notable increase in freight rates all
along the line has followed as a result.
C Decline of the Mississippi River Trade after i860 ^
Traffic on the Mississippi River and its tributaries has, for various reasons,
declined since the Civil War. At an earlier day this traffic was of supreme impor-
tance to the inhabitants of the western states, but with the development of lake
commerce and the building of railroads from the Mississippi valley to the Atlantic
seaboard it suffered a decline, until act the present time its importance is slight.
It is difficult to summarize statistically the present traflSc condi-
tion of the Mississippi River system. The reports of the corps of
United States Engineers cover specific sections of the river, and are
published as made, with no attempt to unify them and eliminate
duplications. The Census Report on Transportation by Water in
1906 excluded all logs and lumber in rafts, and confined its statistics
to the traffic transported by some form of vessel. Inasmuch as raft-
ing has always been one of the chief sources of reliance for interior
river commerce, this leaves the total figures incomplete at a vital
point. The total receipts and shipments on the entire system for
vessels of over 5 tons, including harbor traffic and car ferries, amounted
in 1906 to 31,626,981 net tons. To this should be added, according
to the report of Bureau of Corporations, at least 6,000,000 tons of
logs and rafts. Of the total freight movement, exclusive of harbor
traffic and car ferries, amounting to 19,531,093 tons, more than 56
per cent was coal, and 20 per cent stone and sand. This was an
^ A Traffic History of the Mississippi River System. By Frank Haigh Dixon
(Washington, 1909), Doc. 11 of the National Waterways Commission, 64-70.
668 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
increase in coal traffic since 1889 of 29.4 per cent, and in stone and
sand of 1,147 P^r cent. Lumber and logs in rafts not being included,
it is impossible to determine exactly their movements during these
fifteen years, but the decline has probably been fully 25 per cent.
The movement of grain, cotton, and iron ore has fallen to insignificant
amounts.
A characteristic feature of river transportation, which has been
growing steadily more pronounced since 1865, is the predominance
of the unrigged craft over the packet steamboat. In 1906, out of a
total of 9,622 vessels on the river system, 8,187, or 85 per cent, were
unrigged, and of the steam vessels only 390 were employed for the
carrying of freight and passengers in regular river service. The re-
mainder were tugs and towing vessels, ferryboats and yachts. By
these unrigged craft most of the traffic was transported, the largest
part of the commerce being in Ohio River coal. Out of a total of
19,531,093 tons carried, 13,980,368 tons, or 71 per cent, were trans-
ported on the Ohio in barges and fiats. Aside from bulk traffic in
barges, flats, and rafts, the business on the river is almost wholly
local and for short distances.
This decline has been the subject of much comment, particu-
larly by those who have observed the extended use to which
waterways have been put in many of the European countries.
Yet the causes are not far to seek. It should be remarked,
however, that they are so interwoven one with the other that
it will be somewhat difficult to discuss them separately without
apparent exaggeration of the importance of the particular cause as
it is considered.
The first cause which suggests itself is that of the influence of
competitive agencies, beginning with the eastward movement by lake
and canal early in the thirties, and followed by the rail movement
in the next two decades. This latter agency was undoubtedly more
efficient from the very beginning, because of its greater power to adapt
itself to varied traffic requirements. It is flexible in matters of speed,
extensibility, terminal adaptability, and the like, and it is, moreover,
much more reliable. Consequently, it drew away at once all passenger
travel, except excursion business and local or ferry traffic, and all
mail, express, and fast-freight business, which deprived the steam-
boats of their most lucrative sources of earnings, being greatly aided
in this endeavor by the interruption to water transportation during
the war. But not only was the railway naturally more efficient,
but it grew more efficient, relatively, as the years went on, for the
COMMERCE, TRANSPORTATION, AND COMMUNICATION 669
steamboat business stood still or declined after i860, except in its
handling of a few products by barge.
Whether it is true or not, as frequently charged, that railways have
secured control of steamboat lines, have purposely kept them ineflS-
cient, and have operated them to keep efficient service off the rivers,
it is undoubtedly true that they have, . . . reduced rates at water
competitive points and recouped themselves elsewhere. In this prac-
tice, supported as they are by judicial decree, they have a monopolized
advantage from which competing steamboat lines are excluded.
The question whether the rivers any longer exert an influence
upon rail rates has been frequently debated, emphatic assertions
by the railways that such influence is still potent being met by equally
emphatic statements that the river in its present condition is power-
less to affect the rail rate. In the preliminary report of the Inland
Waterways Commission are included elaborate comparisons of rail
and water rates to various points for different classes and kinds of
commodities. It would appear from a careful study of the tables
bearing upon the Mississippi River situation that the waterway,
inefficient as it is, exerts an influence to-day upon the rail rate varying
in degree according to circumstances. This is made clear by a com-
parison of rates charged by railways paralleling the Mississippi north
of St. Louis, where water traffic still prevails, with rates charged for
similar distances by railways paralleling the Missouri, which is no
longer a commercial factor. Rates on this stretch of the Mississippi
are lower for the same commodity and distance. Yet when the cost
of marine insurance is added to the river rate, and also the drayage
charges which so frequently accompany the consignment and receipt
of river traffic, it is a question whether railways could not, if they saw
fit, absorb most of the water traffic, provided their equipment was
adequate. . . .
The lack of development of river equipment, already referred
to, has been based in large part upon legitimate grounds — an un-
willingness to invest capital in an industry so highly speculative.
The risks are not alone those of railway origin, but they arise in part
from the natural difficulties of navigation. Obstructions due to snags
and bars on aU the rivers except the Missouri have to a considerable
extent been removed, although they are constantly liable to reappear.
The barrier at the mouth of the Mississippi, which until 1878 gave
the railways a decided advantage, is now gone. But there still remain
many obstacles. Ice stops navigation for many months of each year
in the upper river. The swiftness of the current demands a costly
670 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
adjustment of business methods to meet the requu-ements of upstream
traffic — a difficulty absent in the Lakes. The shifting and irregular
current and the uncertainty of the water supply menace navigation.
To such an extent is this true on the upper Mississippi that the one
line now operating between St. Louis and St. Paul decUnes to make
season contracts, and accepts shipments for single trips only. Then
there are the variations in depth of water, most strikingly shown on
the upper Ohio with the January and February floods, when the river
sometimes rises at Cincinnati to 70 feet above low-water mark. This
variation in water depth is not alone dangerous to navigation, but
it prevents the application of capital to the greatest economic advan-
tage. On the Lakes, with an assured depth of water, the largest
vessels can be employed and loaded to their capacity. It is not
profitable to build vessels on the rivers which can run only in the
best stages, and which must lie idle during the rest of the year. But
light-draft vessels are not economical in good stages of water. More-
over, these sharp and sudden variations in the stage of water have
made fLxed wharves impossible and have compelled the use of the
less efficient floating dock. In low stages the cost of loading and un-
loading is sensibly increased in many places by reason of the steep
and high river banks.
But navigation is hindered not alone by variations in stage of
water due to floods and droughts, but also by the normal difference
in depth of the different sections of the river system. The lack of
development in the past of any through traffic from the upper Mis-
sissippi to New Orleans, and the persistence of the costly practice of
transfer at St. Louis, have been due to this difference in depth of th*
lower and upper river, and to the consequent difference in draft 01
vessel employed. It was to meet this difficulty that the barge system
was introduced, whose units, similar to railway cars, could be dropped
or attached at will, and handled on different stretches of river without
the necessity of transfer of load.
Although it must be admitted that from a navigation standpoint
the condition of the Mississippi is much superior to what it was in
the days of its commercial prosperity, yet much remains to be done
and much which is once done has to be frequently repeated. The
destruction of banks due to shifting channels, and the fact that the
Missouri uses the lower Mississippi as a dum])ing ground, make con-
tinuous dredging necessary, and any lessening of vigilance in this
direction through failure of congressional appropriations is promptly
punished by a serious impairment of the navigability of the stream.
COMMERCE, TRANSPORTATION, AND COMMUNICATION 671
Yet however serious navigation difficulties may appear to us, they
can not, except to a small degree, explain the decline of river commerce.
For in spite of all obstructipns, we possess free waterways which are
in many respects superior to those of Europe; yet we have but a frac-
tion of their tonnage. A dead low-water channel of 4I feet prevails
throughout the year from St. Paul to the mouth of the Missouri.
Four feet draft prevails on the Missouri at low water as far as Kansas
City. From St. Louis to Cairo there are only a few days in the year
when a boat drawing 8 feet can not operate freely. Below Cairo for
840 miles there is a 9-foot depth during low water, and for the last
270 miles boats of 25 to 30 feet draft can operate. On the Ohio from
Cairo to Pittsburg, there is a 9-foot depth at low water. In compari-
son with these figures it should be noted that much of the canal and
upriver boat traffic of Europe is performed on i meter (3.28 feet)
draft; most of it is done on 2 meters (6.56 feet) draft and 10 feet
draft is exceptional. Hence it is lack of uniformity in different
sections of the river, and a resulting inability to use equipment to
the best advantage, rather than the shallowness of the streams which
must be accounted the important navigation obstacle.
In the third place, whether, as a result of the two causes just men-
tioned, railway competition and navigation obstacles, or whether,
because of a lack of initiative on the part of river interests after the
war, the steamboat business has been wholly lacking in the administra-
tive organization necessary to cope with so superbly organized an
industry as the railway. Capital has kept out of it. The river steam-
boat, except that it has changed from a passenger to a freight carrier,
is the same craft as always. As late as 1906; out of a total of 1,435
steam vessels on the Mississippi River system, 1,358, or 95 per cent,
were of wood. The old inefficient "roustabout" labor is still em-
ployed, and no attempt whatever has been made to introduce me-
chanical appliances for loading and unloading. There are very few
satisfactory wharves and docks, many of the landings being made on
the river bank, and the goods dumped on shore without cover. As
the rivers are at the lowest levels, goods must be hauled uphill to
reach a place of sale. Good natural landings are few, and artificial
ones are too expensive to be within the reach of small communities.
Thus the terminal expenses as compared with the more flexible rail-
ways are very heavy.
Adequate terminal facihties are in very few instances owned or
controlled by water lines. . . .
In many cases all satisfactory terminal property has been acquired
672 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
by the railways. For example, portions of the river front at Pitts-
burg, New Orleans, St. Louis, and Vicksburg are owned by railway
corporations. The primary purpose of J^he railways is not to check
the development of water transportation, but to secure desirable
land for switch tracks and yards, yet its effect upon the development
of steamboat traffic is disastrous.
Furthermore, nearly half of the steam vessels operated on the
Mississippi, representing, however, only about one-quarter of the ton-
nage, are owned by individuals, and are run independently with very
httle thought of securing united action toward better organization of
river traffic. This makes it impossible for shippers to arrange for
through handling of goods. Repeated rehandlings by irresponsible
steamboat captains cause damage to the goods, and make location of
responsibility for the damage difficult and the settlement slow and
costly. Practically the only traffic which is well organized is that of
coal on the Ohio, and this is largely under the control of a single
corporation. Of the total tonnage in 1906 of unrigged vessels, 96.6
per cent was owned by corporations.
Finally there was and still is a fundamental cause of decline of
river commerce to be found in the relation of traffic movement to
traffic agencies. So long as wheat and corn were produced near the
waterways and could be disposed of at markets located on the rivers,
traffic by river continued; but so soon as either of these conditions
was no longer present, the railway began to take the business. If
grain was shipped from a river port and required transfer to rail for
delivery at a primary market, like Chicago, the expense of transfer
and the lack of all facilities for satisfactory handling turned the
traffic at its source to the railways. When grain began to be produced
away from the waterways, it had to be loaded at first into railway
cars, and once in the cars it remained there until it reached its market.
The movement of the wheat area northwestward to a region west of
Lake Superior and the advance of the corn area westward enhanced
this tendency, and the railways encouraged it both by the provision
of suitable facilities for storage and handling and by the adjustment
of their rates. The effect upon the Mississippi River is strikingly
shown by the fact that although in the fifties there were many towns
with prospects of rapid and successful development, yet at the census
of 1900 there was not a river town from St. Paul to St. Louis with
40,000 people and only three, Quincy, Davenport, and Dubuque,
with over 25,000 inhabitants. The same principle may be illustrated
in other parts of the system. For example, Madison and New Al-
COMMERCE, TRANSPORTATION, AND COMMUNICATION 673
bany, Ind., both declined in population between 1890 and 1900, and
neither of them had 25,000 people in the latter year, whereas Indian-
apolis, pre-eminently a railway center, which in 1840 had less popula-
tion than either of the towns mentioned and in 1850 almost exactly
the same number, had in 1900 a population of 169,000.
So far as export business by way of New Orleans is concerned, the
long roundabout journey, combined with lack of satisfactory steam-
ship facilities at New Orleans, has had its influence in turning traffic
eastward by rail.
The kind of business which has most satisfactorily developed on
the Mississippi River system has been that transported in the form
of rafts, the lumber business, and that handled by barges, of which
coal is the best example. The former flourished on the upper Mis-
sissippi, and is still prosperous on the lower Mississippi and the Ohio
and tributaries, because, as already indicated, it can be slipped into
the water and carried to its market with little expenditure of labor
and with no necessity of transfer. So soon as the forests were cut off
on the banks of upper Mississippi tributaries, rafting began to decHne,
and a rapidly increasing proportion of lumber and log output was
carried by rail.
The Ohio River coal traffic illustrates peculiarly well the kind and
method of business to which the river system is at present adapted.
In this industry, to be sure, are some of the advantages which are
lacking in any other, namely, administrative organization, mechanical
loading appliances, and the highest development of barge traffic.
But in addition to all this, coal can be loaded direct from the mines
into the barges and can then be transported without any rehandling
to its destination, which is the river steamboat, the ocean-going
steamship, the sugar plantation on the bay, or the railway coal yard
on the river bank. In other words, the Mississippi can at present
handle traffic successfully which begins and ends within its banks,
but traffic requiring transfer to the railway at any point on its course
will have a tendency to resort to the railway for the entire distance.
Whether this situation is due to a control of terminal and transfer
facilities by the railways and a refusal to pro rate with the waterway,
whether it is due to lack of initiative on the part of river interests in
developing transfer facilities, or whether it is due to the greater cheap-
ness of an all-rail haul, the fact remains that carriage involving transfer
no longer makes use of the Mississippi River system.
A recent special report of a board of United States engineers
calls attention, in explaining the insignificant commerce of the lower
674 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
Mississippi, to the fact that the population in sections bordering the
river is as low as 86 to 24 per square mile, including cities, and that in
a total length of about 1,265 miles there are only seven towns or
cities of over 10,000 population and only 23 of over 5,000 population.
In reply to this and in answer to the statements which picture the
declining condition of river commerce the advocates of waterways
insist that if they were given an improved channel commensurate with
the needs of business, traffic would come and the thinly settled sections
along the rivers, would be built up. They also contend that even
if commerce were not developed by the waterway the existence of a
waterway ready for use would so affect railway rates as amply to
justify the expenditure for construction. This last contention may
be dismissed with a few words. No expenditure by the National
Government would be justified for the construction or improvement of
a useless or idle waterway unless the saving could be clearly demon-
strated in advance. Such a demonstration would, in the nature of
things, be quite impossible, for it is evident that the comparative
attractiveness of rail and water routes is not a simple question of
comparative rates. A variety of factors which can be summed up
in the word "serviceability" actually determine the method of ship-
ment, and such factors can not be predetermined. If the purpose
is to reduce railway rates, there are more direct and less costly
methods of accomplishing this result.
The influence of a waterway in developing traffic is somewhat
problematical, and no final answer can be given to the claims
of those who insist that trade will follow the lock and the dam.
Although there are real obstacles at present to successful naviga-
tion, as already noted, nevertheless it is difficult to understand
vv'hy the commercial interests, if they are so eager for a waterway,
have not made better use of existing facilities. The inference is
a natural one that the trouble lies elsewhere than in the condition
of water navigation.
But it must be admitted that there is some basis for the contention
that good t/affic facilities develop traffic. The truth of this has been
often demonstrated by the railways. The waterway advocates have
reason to count upon a repetition at least in part of railway experience,
but hardly to the extent claimed by some of the extremists among the
supporters of the policy. They have, however, the right to a reason-
able assurance that such improvement work as is now being carried
on and such plans as have been undertaken for further betterment
shall be continuous, in order that such investments as they may make
COMMERCE, TRANSPORTATION, AND COMMUNICATION 675
in floating equipment shall not be lost by an abandonment of im-
provement work-
To four general influences, then, may be assigned the decline in
Mississippi River commerce: First, competition of rail and lake;
second, natural obstructions to navigation; third, lack of administra-
tive organization of the water transportation business; and fourth,
certain fundamental principles of traffic movement which under ex-
isting conditions work to the disadvantage of water carriage.
D. The Future of Rail and Water Transportation
Mr. James J. Hill, one of the best known railroad men of the country, gave it
as his opinion in 1908 that there was no antagonism between railroads and internal
waterways. He said further that the ideal situation was one in which each of these
channels of communication would supplement the other.
. . . The phrase, "The Future of Rail and Water Transportation,"
indicates their close correlation. I am glad to emphasize right here
the fact that their relation is one of harmony, of helpfulness and
of co-operation.
There is no reason from the railway standpoint why it should be
otherwise. The trunk lines between Chicago and New York were
built and have created their enormous traffic in face of the competi-
tion of the Erie canal. St. Louis, one of the important centers of
railroad business on this continent, has the Mississippi at her service.
On the Ohio is some of the cheapest water carriage in the country.
Its cost in 1905 is reported as .76 of one miU per ton per mile to move
freight by river from Pittsburg to LouisviUe, and .67 of one mill per
ton per mile from Louisville to New Orleans. Rates much lower
than these are made on barge tows during the season. This is a cheap
and convenient route by which the coal of Pennsylvania and Ohio
may be moved to the factories of St. Louis. Coal can be shipped
profitably by water if anything can. What is the fact? Of a total of
8,743,047 tons of coal received at St. Louis in 1907, just 155,470 tons
were carried by boat. A large part of this comes from local mines.
Every pound of the 1,155,645 tons shipped out went by rail. And of
all commodities received at and shipped from that city, amounting
in 1907 to nearly 48,000,000 tons, just 368,075 tons, or less than .79
of one per cent., were brought in or sent out by water. The chair-
man of the freight committee of the New Orleans Board of Trade
says, in the last report of that body: ''It is a weU-known fact that the
1 Letter of James J. Hill. Read' at The-Lake-to-the-Gulf Deep Waterway
Convention (Chicago, October yth-gth, 1908), 1-6, 12-6, 24-6.
676 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
steamboats plying out of this port find a number of prominent rail-
road competitive points on their route. It is also, we regret to say, a
positive fact that our boats are accorded but little business shipping
out of this city to said points. Practically the only out-bound freights
that are shipped on the boats are such as cannot be delivered by a
railroad." Galveston, with no such waterway at her doors, exported
14,172,071 bushels of wheat in 1907, as against 5,496,935 for New
Orleans. Up to this time the river has been unable to compete with
the railroad, notwithstanding its lower charges, because of the rapidity
and certainty with which the latter carries and delivers freight. In
the year 1855-56 the domestic exports from New Orleans amounted
to $80,000,000, and were practically all carried by water. Not in
recent times has the commerce of the lower river reached $3,000,000,
although the total imports and exports of New Orleans in 1907
were over $200,000,000. These figures expose the absurdity of
the theory that the railroads need feel either jealousy or fear of the ^
waterway.
I have shown the failures of certain waterways as competitors
of rail lines. Equally interesting is their experience with a waterway
which is a glorious success and already the most wonderful thorough-
fare for steam craft in the world. On the Great Lakes 97,000,000
tons were carried last year. The voliune of lake commerce is always
growing. The registered tonnage of the "Soo" canal in 1907 was
over 44,000,000 tons. Over 60,000,000 tons passed the Detroit
river in 1906. The ore alone carried last year by the lake route
amounted to over 900 pounds for every man, woman and child in
the United States. The tonnage passing through the Suez canal
in the same year was but 14,728,434. But while the phenomenal
growth of lake business and reduction of the lake rate, which was
22.36 cents per bushel by lake and canal from Chicago to New York
in 1867 and 6.64 cents in 1907, have taken place practically within
the last twenty-five years, the railroads running west and northwest
from Buffalo and Chicago have not suffered. On the contrary, in
this territory traffic has increased with amazing rapidity; and the
capacity of the railroads is taxed to handle business that cannot or
will not use other routes.
Every intelligent railroad man knew this long ago. He dis-
missed fear of the waterway as a competitor; not because it is either
unimportant or powerless, but because the two carriers are supple-
menUry instead of mutually destructive. He foresaw the day, when
under normal business conditions the railroads would be unequal to
COMMERCE, TRANSPORTATION, AND COMMUNICATION 677
the work demanded of them; when the assistance of the waterway-
would be valuable, both as a carrier and as tending to relieve conges-
tion by increasing the number and extending the geographical and
necessary distribution of terminals. And he has worked to that end.
You cannot find a man eminent in railroading in this country to-day
who is not also an ardent advocate of waterway improvement. Let
us start right by dismissing this bogey of envy and baseless opposition.
Senator Knox has stated the case correctly in these terse words:
''European experience has established the law that with waterways
carrying the slow and heavy freights which most congest the railways
and on which their return is most narrow, the growth of industry
and population more than compensates them in the growth of their
high-class freight, express, mail and passenger traffic."
Understanding, then, that railroads and waterways are to work
together for the development of this country and the betterment of its
people, how can each be aided most in discharging its vast and valuable
functions in the national economy? I have already stated on different
occasions the determining facts bearing upon the future of railroading
in this country. The passage of time only intensifies the difficulties
of the situation. Two years ago I pointed out that, in the ten years
between 1895 and 1905, the railroad mileage of the country had in-
creased but 21 per cent., while the passenger business had grown 95
per cent, and the freight business 118 per cent. The latest report of
the Interstate Commerce Commission carries an even graver warning.
By the decade ending in 1907, the increase of mileage as compared
with 1897 had crept up to 24.7 per cent.; but in the same time the in-
crease of passenger business had leaped to 126.1 per cent., and that
of freight traffic to 148.7 per cent.
The country was saved from a complete traffic breakdown only
by increasing operating efficiency after it had already been raised
apparently to the limit. Density of trafl5c might have been thought
to have reached its maximum in 1906, when every railroad performed
prodigies in order to do the work required of it. Yet the increase of
density in 1907 on the entire railroad system of the country was
69,718 freight tons for every mile of line, or about 20 tons per mile for
every day in the year. I have for years been urging that the building
up of a transportation machine commensurate with the growth
of the country should not only be permitted but encouraged in
the only two possible ways: First, by encouraging capital to
invest in railroad construction, instead of scaring it away by hostile
and unjust legislation; and, second, by a comprehensive and
678 READLNGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
rational system of waterway improvement. There is no other wa\
now, nor will there ever be, by which the business of the country can
be done. . . .
... It will be the deep waterway that helps business, just as it
the deep harbor that has built up trade and lowered rates by makii
it possible to run boats of greater tonnage. I said a year ago to 1 1
members of the National Rivers and Harbors Congress that they should
work for a fifteen-foot channel in the Mississippi and that eighteen
or twenty would be twice as good. If you have a waterway, you
want it deep enough to do business. A barge that carries only 1,000
tons cannot compete with a box car. With a steamer carrying 10,000
tons you have beaten it. Twenty years ago the largest carriers on
the lakes that could pass through the old ''Soo" canal, with it-
fourteen-foot locks, were about 3,000 tons. To-day an ordinar\
load is 10,000 or 12,000 tons. The canal has been deepened '
twenty-one feet, and with what result? The commerce of the Grt,
Lakes is one of the wonders of the world. Twenty years ago Duluth
was a little town with a promising local trade only. To-day it is
one of the great shipping ports of the world, with unlimited possi-
bilities of expansion. For 1905 the total tonnage of New York
harbor, foreign and coastwise, was 30,314,062. For 1906 Chicag<^'<
tonnage was 15,638,051. That of Liverpool and Birkenhead in 10
was 16,147,856, and London's in 1905 was 25,867,485. The govern
ment report for the year 1907 gives the tonnage of the Duluth-Su-
perior harbor at 34,786,705, with a valuation of $287,529,705. Dec])
harbors on the lakes, admitting the use of big freighters, have macK'
such growth in all our lake cities possible. The first principle of
river improvement, then, is that these shall be made deep watc
ways; real and not useless arteries for commerce. . . .
Waterways should be made as other great works are created
The first railroads did not begin in the heart of the country and end
nowhere. They were lines between imjjortant centers and terminal
points; and extensions, branches and feeders were added as needed.
That is what waterway improvement needs. Locate your trunl
lines first. Open a way to the sea by the biggest, freest outh
Push the work as nature indicates, from the scacoast up the river-
And this, of course, should be done with ami)le resources according to
a general scheme which will include reservoirs on the head waters ot
the main stream and as many of its tributaries as may be necessar\
to prevent floods and maintain a deep channel in the dry season;
together with such canalization of the river, or canal construction
COMMERCE, TRANSPORTATION, AND COMMUNICATION 679
parallel with its course, as will assure a sufficient and permanent chan-
nel for boats of the largest size during the season of navigation.
There would be general agreement, probably, that the lower
Mississippi, from New Orleans to St. Louis, should first be opened
to navigation; and that the deep water connection with the lakes
should come next. And it is as important that the order of these
improvements be not reversed as it is that you do not set the water
running in your bathroom before you have provided an escape pipe
and a sewer connection. The Mississippi basin contains two-fifths
of the area of the United States; more than half its population lives
in States touching the navigable portions of the great river and its
tributaries, and its products feed the world. We have really done
nothing permanent yet to make it a navigable river. Protection of
caving banks, revetment, dredging and snag-pulling are only tempo-
rary expedients. The river is not and cannot now be used as a carrier
ought to be if it is to play a part in national transportation. In 1888
there were 3,323 boats and barges, carrying 597,955 tons of freight,
besides lumber and logs, arriving at St. Louis. In 1907 there were
1,330, carrying 289,575 tons. The departures in 1888 numbered
2,076, with 510,115 tons; in 1907 they were 931, with 78,500 tons.
There is small reason to wonder at the decline when the government
record of river stages shows the lowest gauge, which, of course, gov-
erns the whole steamboat business, to have been four feet and three-
tenths in one month of 1907, and for six months to have been no higher
than eight and one-tenth feet at St. Louis. Yet in the last forty
years the government has spent $250,000,000 on the Mississippi and
its more important branches. . . .
The future of the waterway as a factor in transportation cannot
be injured except by folly. The essentials for developing its highest
possibilities are few and simple. Let me, for clearness, repeat them.
First, a permanent commission, authorized to expend appropriations
in its discretion upon national waterways in the order of their impor-
tance. Second, a comprehensive plan including the classification of
rivers and canal routes in the order of their value, including also
such reservoir and slackwater work as may be required for the working
out of each project to success. This plan in its essentials to be
adopted by the commission at the outset and adhered to without inter-
ference by Congress or any department. Third, insistence upon the
development of trunk lines first, and upon a depth that will make
these real carriers of commerce, able to aid the railroads in their
staggering task and to transport bulky freight expeditiously and
68o READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
economically. Fourth, a liberal standing appropriation annuall\
for the commission's work until its plans shall have been carried out
over the whole country; and a refusal to ask the pledge of the nation'
credit for a single dollar of this, which is properly our work.
V. Communication
A. De-velopment of Telegraph and Telephone Systems, 1844-igoy^
The extension of the telegraph service to all parts of the country has tended t
eUminate distances and thus to facilitate business. Scarcely a village is witho
its telephones, and even thousands of farmers have telephonic connection with an
other and with adjoining towns and cities.
The first telegraph line in the United States was opened for
business in 1844, and thirty- two years later the telephone was in-
troduced. In the early stages of its development the telephoii
industry was associated with the telegraph industry, but the tw
have now long been distinct, and the telephone is to some extent a
competitor of the telegraph for the business of long-distance commu-
nication, although recently the leading telephone company has ac-
quired a large stock interest in one of the leading telegraph companies.
At the census of 1880 the telegraph companies reported the openi-
tion of 291,213 miles of wire as compared with 34,305 miles reported
for the telephone companies. By the census of 1902 the amount of
wire for the telegraph systems had increased to 1,318,350 miles and
that for the telephone systems to 4,900,451 miles. Thus in 1902 the
mileage of wire devoted to the transmission of telephone message
was almost four times as great as that used for telegraph purposes.
Both industries developed rapidly between 1902 and 1907, and by
the end of that period the mileage of single wire devoted primarily
to the telephone business was eight times as great as the mileage
used for the commercial telegraph business.
In the amount of business done in 1907, the amount paid in
salaries and wages during the year, and the capital invested, the
telephone business was more than three and one-half times as extensive
as the telegraph industry, and during the year it furnished employ-
ment for more than five times as many persons.
In 1907 a total of 14,570,142 miles of wire was in use for the trans-
mission of commercial messages, and of this total, 12,999,369 miles,
or 89.2 per cent, were used primarily for telephone messages,
* Department of Commerce and Labor, Bureau of the Census. Special Re-
ports. Telephone: 1907 (Washington, 19 10), 15-18.
COMMERCE, TRANSPORTATION, AND COMMUNICATION 68i
and 1,570,773 miles, or io.8 per cent, for the telegraph business.
The telephone business has increased more rapidly than the other
branch of the industry. Between 1902 and 1907 there was an addi-
tion of 8,098,918 miles of wire for the use of the telephone systems
of the country as compared with an increase of 259,611 in the mileage
of owned and leased wire for the use of commercial telegraph systems.
The increase in the wire mileage of the telephone systems during that
period of five years is more than six times as great as the total amount
of existing wire that has been added to the telegraph business since the
date when the first statistics concerning the industry were gathered.
The development of the long-distance telephone system and the
increasing use by railway companies of the telephone for the dispatch
of business have necessarily had some effect on the extension of the
use of the telegraph. Naturally the increase in the use of the tele-
phone has greatly outdistanced the increase in the use of the tele-
graph. ...
At the close of 1907 the amount of wire in use by the telephone
systems of the country exceeded that in use in 1902 by more than
8,000,000 miles, and the other leading items showed proportionately
large increases. It is especially interesting to learn that the industry
gave regular employment to 65,417 more persons in 1907 than it did
five years earlier, and that the amount expended in salaries and wages
was greater by $32,023,506 in 1907 than in 1902.
Until recent years the field of operation of a telephone system
was restricted to a comparatively small area, but the introduction
of the long-distance lines and the arrangements for toll service between
neighboring companies have made communication possible between
widely separated sections of the country with a facility which of itself
has contributed to increase the business of the industry.
Naturally the most extensive equipment and the greatest amount
of business are found in the states that have the largest population. . . .
The industry is largely concentrated in the populous . North
Atlantic and North Central states, and the greatest amount of increase
between the years 1902 and 1907 in wire mileage, telephones, and
business is shown for these states. More rapid rates of increase
occurred in other sections, however, and the largest percentages of
gain for wire mileage are shown for the Western, South Central, and
South Atlantic states, where, as a rule, the telephones are farther
apart than in the other divisions. The Western states had the largest
percentages of increase also in the number of telephones and messages
or talks. In accepting the percentages of increase the relative size
682 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
of the totals involved should be given due weight. Between 1902
and 1907 New York had the greatest increases in the number of tele-
phones and in the miles of wire, the gains being 438,172 and 1,006,451,
respectively; whereas the corresponding increases for the entire
Western division, 332,854 telephones and 898,411 miles of wire, are
less than those for the single state of New York. Yet the rate of
increase for telephones in the Western division is nearly equal to that
for New York state, the rates being 160.5 per cent for the division
and 177.2 per cent for the state; while the rate of increase for miles of
wire in the Western division, 293.8 per cent, far exceeds that for
New York state, 16 1.4 per cent.
In 1907 eleven states had over 200,000 telephones each, while
in 1902 only three states — New York, Ohio, and Illinois — had this
number. . . .
B. The Postal System^ igii ^
The post office system has extended its services to every part of the country,
until improvements on any large scale seem scarcely possible. The fastest trains
carry the mail, city routes are covered several times daily and even hundreds
of thousands of country homes have their mail brought direct to their doors
daily. The parcels post has become a reality and those who objected to the
Government assuming such function have been silenced by its success. Condi-
tions as they were in 191 1 were described by the Postmaster General as follows:
A POSTAL SURPLUS
For the first time since 1883 the annual financial statement of the
Post Office Department shows a surplus instead of a deficit. The
revenues for the fiscal year ended June 30, 191 1, amounted to $237,-
879,823.60 and the expenditures to $237,660,705.48, leaving a surplus
of $219,118.12. At the beginning of the present administration in
1909 the postal service was in arrears to the extent of $17,479,770.47,
which was decidedly the largest deficit on record. In the brief space
of two years this deficit has been changed into a substantial surplus.
EXTENSION OF THE SERVICE
The wiping out of the deficit has been accomplished without
curtailment of postal facilities. On the contrary, important exten-
sions have been made in every branch of the service. Since the
opening of the present administration there have been established
3,744 new post offices, delivery by carrier has been provided in 186
» Annual Report of the Postmaster General of the United States, tgii (Washing-
ton, 1912), is-i7f X9» ai-aa.
COMMERCE, TRANSPORTATION, AND COMMUNICATION 683
additional cities, and 2,516 new rural routes, aggregating 60,679
miles, have been authorized. Meanwhile the force of postal employees
has been increased by more than 8,000. In compensating such em-
ployees the department follows a liberal poUcy. Last year the total
amount expended for salaries was approximately $14,000,000 greater
than two years ago. The average annual salary has been increased
from $869 to $967 for rural carriers, from $979 to $1,082 for post-
office clerks, from $1,021 to $1,084 for city letter carriers, and from
$1,168 to $1,183 for railway postal clerks. Thus a marked exten-
sion of the postal service and higher compensation for its employees
have gone hand in hand with a vanishing deficit.
POSTAL SAVINGS SYSTEM
An important event of the year was the successful organization
of the Postal Savings System. On January 3, 191 1, depositories were
opened experimentally at a single post office in each one of the 48
States and Territories. After a careful test for four months at these
offices the system was rapidly extended, and now comprises practically
all of the 7,500 presidential post offices. Preparations are being made
to establish the system also in about 40,000 fourth-class offices that
do a money-order business. . . .
Postal savings deposits have kept pace with the extension of the
system. Amounting at the end of the first month to only $60,252
in the 48 experimental offices, they increased in a half year to $679,310,
and now, after 11 months of operation, have reached a total of
$11,000,000. This sum has been distributed among 2,710 national
and State banks, where it is protected by bonds deposited with the
Treasurer of the United States.
Assuming that the Postal Savings System will be extended to
additional offices in accordance with present plans, and that with
this extension the deposits will continue to increase at the same rate
as now, it is confidently predicted that from forty to fifty million
dollars will have been taken in by the close of the current fiscal year.
At that time the income of the system should be sufficient to pay all
operating expenses, including those incurred at the central adminis-
trative office.
PARCEL POST
Now that the successful operation of the Postal Savings System
is assured, it is hoped that Congress will promptly authorize the estab-
lishment of a parcel post. The benefits of this service are widely
684 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
enjoyed by the people of foreign countries and should be provided
in the United States. The department not only renews its recom-
mendation of last year for legislative authority to start a parcel post
on rural routes, but asks a similar authorization for the introduction
of such a service in cities and towns having delivery by carrier. After
the organization of a parcel post on rural routes and in the Cit}-
Delivery Service is completed, its extension to include railway and
other transportation lines can be more readily accomplished without
impeding the handling of the ordinary mail. In establishing a parcel
post service great care should be taken not to cause a congestion o\
the mails and thus embarrass the present operations of the post ofhce<.
An attempt to absorb immediately under one sweeping order the entii
parcel business of the country v/ould be a dangerous experiment foi
our postal service. That the difficulties of such a plan may be avoided
the department favors a more gradual introduction of a parcel post
in the manner proposed. To bring the issue clearly before Congress,
three items of $50,000 each have been inserted in the estimates of the
postal service, two of these items to cover the initial expense of intro-
ducing a parcel post on rural routes and in the City Delivery Service,
respectively, and the third item to meet the cost of an investigation
looking to the final extension of the service to the railways and other
transportation lines. If Congress will grant without delay the desired
authority and provide the necessary appropriations it is believed that
before the end of another year a satisfactory parcel post can be or-
ganized on rural routes and in cities with a carrier service, thus
paving the way for the final step in the organization of a general
parcel post. . . .
SraPMENT OF PERIODICALS BY FREIGHT
Among the measures adopted by the department during the year
that will materially reduce the annual cost of carrying second-class
mail is that of shipping monthly, semimonthly, and bi-weekly periodi-
cals by fast freight. The plan is being put into successful operation
without serious inconvenience to publishers or subscribers. It will
not only result in a large saving to the Government by utilizing a less
expensive method of shipment, but what is still more important to
the business interest of the country it will insure a quicker handling
of first-class mail. By taking out of the railway post office cars the
heavy periodical matter formerly sorted en route a more rapid dis-
tribution of letters is made possible. Thus the new mellKKl of ship-
ping certain periodicals will mean greater efficiency in the handling
COMMERCE, TRANSPORTATION, AND COMMUNICATION 685
of a class of mail that is far more important to the pubHc. The
saving from the new plan when in full operation will amount to several
million dollars a year. . . .
CITY DELIVERY SERVICE
Important changes were also made during the year in the city
carrier service. A reduction in the number of deliveries for the resi-
dential districts of certain cities resulted in some misapprehension
as to the purposes of the department. In each case the object was
to permit the redistribution of the carrier service so as to make it
more effective as a whole. The curtailment of too frequent deliveries
in residential sections enabled the department to provide more de-
liveries in business districts. This pohcy is almost universally
approved by business men, who are willing to have fewer deliveries
at their residences in order to obtain more frequent service at their
places of business. As already pointed out, the city delivery service
has been greatly extended in the last two years, during which
period letter carriers have been placed on duty for the first time
in 186 additional cities.
VILLAGE DELIVERY SERVICE
Delivery by letter carrier, except on rural routes, is confined under
existing law to cities and towns having as much as 10,000 population
or annual post-office receipts amounting to $10,000 or more. Thus
the residents of many small towns and villages are obliged to go to
the post offices for their mail, while delivery service by carrier is
afforded both to the inhabitants of cities and to people residing along
the rural routes in sparsely settled country districts. The carrier
delivery system is now in operation in 1,541 cities, serving an urban
population of about 45,000,000, while rural carriers deliver mail on
42,000 routes that reach about 20,000,000 people. This leaves about
25,000,000 people in the United States, most of whom live in small
towns and villages, without any form of mail delivery. The estab-
lishment of such a service in these towns and villages under the present
law governing the employment and compensation of city letter
carriers would be hardly feasible because of the heavy expense in-
volved. It is believed, however, that in many villages not now
entitled to free delivery a comparatively small allowance would
enable the postmasters to employ the assistance necessary to carry
mail to the residences. ...
686 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
RURAL MAIL SERVICE
The consolidation of the rural delivery and star-route services,
. . . has proved to be most beneficial. It has enabled the department
to extend mail delivery to many thousands of additional patrons by
a rearrangement of established routes with little increase in the annual
rate of expenditure. Much needless duplication of service, which it
was difficult to prevent with two independent systems of rural
delivery, has been eliminated since their consolidation. Under the
new plan of organization the rural mail service is being rapidly ex-
tended.
c%~^
CHAPTER XX
FINANCIAL HISTORY, MONEY AND BANKING
i86o-igij
I. Financing the War
A. Extent and Character of Government Receipts and
Expenditures, i860 ^
The receipts and expenditures of the government at the outbreak of the
Civil War were meager as compared to those during the war period. Thus
receipts for the fiscal year i860 approximated $80,000,000, and expenditures
were only a little less. The pubUc debt, which was something Hke $70,000,000,
carried an interest charge of about eleven cents _per capita. The "goveriiment
had but one important source of revenue" the tariff. A detailed statement of
both receipts and expenditures follows: "
Treasury Department,
December, 4, i860.
SIR: In compliance with the act of Congress entitled "An act
supplementary to an act to establish the Treasury Department,"
approved May 10, 1800, I have the honor to submit the following
report:
On the first day of July, 1859, being the commencement of the
fiscal year i860, the balance in the treasury was $4>339>275.54
The receipts into the treasury during the fiscal year i860 were as
follows:
For the quarter ending September 30, 1859:
From customs $15,947,670.62
From pubHc lands 470,244.62
From miscellaneous sources 379,650.61
From treasury notes, per act December 23,
1857 3,611,300.00
From loan, per act June 14,1858 210,000.00 20,618,865.85
Treasury Report, i860 (Washington, i860), 3-4, 6-7.
688 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
For the quarter ending December 31, 1859:
From customs 10,785,849.93
From public lands 445,535-36
From miscellaneous sources 149,392.76
From treasury notes, per act December 23,
1857 • 4,064,500.00
From loan, per act June 14, 1858 60,000.00 i5,SoS)278.os
For the quarter ending March 31, i860:
From customs 14,962,783.68
From public lands 505,591-83
From miscellaneous sources 245,447.36
From treasury notes, per act December 23,
1857 5,588,200.00
From loan, per act June 14,1858 1,110,000.00 22,412,022.87
For the quarter ending June 30, i860:
From customs 11,491,207.64
From public lands 357,185.90
From miscellaneous sources 236,273.58
From treasury notes, per act December 23,
1857 6,131,200.00 18,215,867.12
Making the aggregate means for the service of the fiscal year
ending June 30, i860 81,091,309.43
The expenditures during the fiscal year ending June 30, i860,
were as follows:
For the quarter ending September 30, 1859 20,007,174.76
For the quarter ending December 31, 1859 16,025,526.69
For the quarter ending March 31, i860 20,377,502.70
For the quarter ending June 30, i860 21,051,898.57
77,462,102.72
Which amount was applied to the respective branches of the
public service as follows:
To civil, foreign intercourse, and miscellaneous services 27,969,870.84
To service of Interior Department (Indians and pensions) 3,955,686.59
To service of War Department. 16,409,767.10
To service of Navy Department 11,513,150.19
To the public<lebt 1 7,613,628.00
77,462,102.72
FINANCIAL HISTORY, MONEY AND BANKING 689
Estimates for the fiscal year from ist July, 1861, to 30th June, 1862.
Estimated receipts from customs $60,000,000.00
Estimated receipts from public lands ' 3,000,000.00
Estimated receipts from miscellaneous sources 1,250,000.00
Estimated balance in treasury on ist July, 1861 245,891.58
Aggregate estimated means for fiscal year 1862 64,495,891.58
Estimated expenditures from permanent appropriations 9,626,386.20
Estimated expenditures from balance of former appropriations
not before required 12,198,112.62
Estimates now submitted by the executive departments for
appropriation by Congress 46,539,227.29
Aggregate estimated expenditures for fiscal year 1862 68,363,726.11
Showing a deficit of estimated means for the service of the fiscal
year ending 30th June, 1862, of 3,867,834.53
The suggestions above made, as to not drawing from the treasury
during the year the whole amount of the appropriations authorized
by law, will apply to these estimates, so that instead of the above
deficiency of $3,867,834.53, there will probably remain [in] the trea-
sury on the ist July, 1862, a balance of about $8,000,000.
B. Money Cost of the Civil War, i86q ^
The money cost of the Civil War was stupendous in its magnitude, so
much so that few if any of the pubUc men of the time would have believed
at the beginning of the conflict that such a cost would have been borne by the
people. It was borne, however, with Httle apparent difficulty and without
much complaint, for the north prospered in spite of the War. The milUon or
more northerners in the field required immense quantities of food and equip-
ment, and their places had been taken by improved machinery. The money
cost of the war was reported on in 1869 by the Special Commissioner of the
Revenue, David A. Wells, as follows:
It would seem to be desirable at this point, now that all feeling in
regard to the subject from its bearing on political questions has appar-
ently passed away, to place upon record the exact cost of the war,
as nearly as the same can be determined. With this object, attention
is asked to the following exhibit:
The amount of outstanding national indebtedness March 7,
1861, was : $76,455,299.28
1 Report of the Special Commissioner of the Revenue, i86g (Washington, 1870),
IV-VI.
690 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
During the four years of war which terminated in April, 1865,
(April I, 1 86 1, to April i, 1865,) the actual receipts of the treasur\-
were as follows:
From internal revenue $314,337,31 7oi
From customs 280,861,618.45
From lands 1,812,083.80
From direct tax 4,668,259.31
From miscellaneous sources 74,120,413.37
Total receipts 675,799,691.94
The receipts of revenue from April i, 1865, to June 30, 1869,
inclusive, during which period the larger portion of the expenditures
has been directly in consequence of the war, were as follows:
From internal revenue $967,207,221.41
From customs 729,991,875.97
From lands 7,402,188.28
From direct tax 9,017,217.30
From miscellaneous sources 194,949,122.13
Total receipts $1,908,567,625.09
The amount of outstanding indebtedness, less cash and sink-
ing fund in treasury, June 30, 1869, was $2,489,002,480.58
Deducting from this the amount of outstanding indebted-
ness at the outbreak of the war ($76,455,299.28,) we have,
as the sum borrowed for war purposes and not rej)aid out
of the receipts above indicated 2,412,547,181.30
Making the total expenditure (loans and receipts) in eight
and a quarter years of war and its effects 4,996,914,498.33
Deducting the amount which, but for the war, might be
taken as the average expenditure of the government during
this period, say one hundred millions per annum 825,000,000.00
We shall have $4,171,914,498.33
which sum represents the cost of the war to the United States gov-
ernment down to June 30, 1869.
To this sum should be added the value of the pensions now paid
by the Government on account of the war, if the same were capitalized.
This, at eight years' purchase of the present annual payment, would
amount to about two hundred millions.
FINANCIAL HISTORY, MONEY AND BANKING 691
But this aggregate, however large, must still further be increased
by other items if we would reach the true cost of the war to us as a
people, the above representing only the expenditures of the national
government.
These additional charges are substantially as follows:
Increase of State debts, mainly on war account $123,000 000
County, city, and town indebtedness increased on account of the
war, (estimated) 200,000,000
Expenditures of States, counties, cities, and towns, on account
of the war, not represented by funded debt, (estimated) 600,000,000
Estimated loss to the loyal States from the diversion and suspen-
sion of industry, and the reduction of the American marine and
carrying trade 1,200,000,000
Estimated direct expenditures and loss of property by the Con-
federate States by reason of the war 2,700,000,000
These estimates, which are believed to be moderate and reasonable,
show an aggregate destruction of wealth, or diversion of industry
which would have produced wealth, in the United States since 1861,
approximating nine thousand millions of dollars — a sum nominally
in excess of the entire increase of wealth, as returned by the census,
for the whole country from 1850 to i860.
II. The Greenbacks
A. Quantity and Nature of the Greenback Issues, 1864 ^
One of the methods adopted by Congress for raising war revenue was the .
issuing of United States notes, popularly known as greenbacks. The total
amount authorized was $450,000,000. These notes displaced coins as a circu-
lating medium and caused a rise in prices as measured in the greenbacks them- ,
selves. In other words the value of the notes fell measured in gold. Because
of their effect on prices and on the circulation of gold, many persons have
criticized Congress for authorizing them. An official account of the greenback
situation was given in 1864 as follows:
The necessities of the treasury were, however, immediate. To
raise money in large amounts by taxation, and even by loans, requires
more time than can always be afforded with large armies in the field
and great navies afloat. The demands of war are imperative, and
cannot await the slow process of financial negotiations. To meet
a demand thus urgent. Congress, by acts of February 25 and July 11,
1862, saw fit to authorize the emission of United States notes to the
amount, including sixty millions of treasury notes previously author-
^ Treasury Report, 1864 (Washington, 1864), 3.
^
692 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
ized, which were to be redeemed and cancelled, of three hundred
millions of dollars, as a substitute for coin, declaring them a legal
tender for debts, public and private, and clothing them with all tht
requisites of currency. These notes were convertible, at the will 01
the holder, into bonds of the United States, paying interest at six
per centum, semi-annually, in coin, to secure which the revenue from
customs, also payable in coin, was specifically pledged. The sann
act of February 25, 1862, authorized the issue of bonds to the amount
of five hundred millions, increased subsequently to five hundred and
eleven millions, redeemable after five years and payable in twenty
years from date.
Notwithstanding the ample provision supposed to be made by
Congress for the expenditures of the fiscal year ending on the 30th
of June, 1863, the report of the Secretary, submitted on the 4th of
December, 1862, showed a deficiency for the current year of $276,-
912,517.66; while the estimated amount of expenditures over receipts
from ordinary sources for the succeeding year was $622,388,186.56.
To provide for the aggregate of these amounts. Congress, by an act
approved March 3, 1863, authorized a loan of three hundred millions
for the then current, and of six hundred millions for the then next,
fiscal year. By the second section of the same act the Secretary was
authorized to issue, as a part of said loan, four hundred millions in
amount of treasury notes, bearing interest at a rate not exceeding
six per centum per annum, payable in lawful money, which notes,
payable at periods expressed on their face, might be made a legal
tender at their face value. By the third section, one hundred and
fifty millions in amount of United States notes, of a like character with
those previously issued under the provisions of former acts, were
authorized as a part of said loan.
It will be seen that, by the several acts of Congress referred to,
government paper, as a substitute for coin, under the respective
designations of United States notes and treasury notes, might be issued
to the amount of eight hundred and fifty millions of dollars, viz.:
United States notes, not bearing interest, to the amount of four
hundred and fifty millions, but of which fifty millions were to be held .
in reserve for the redemption of temporary deposits, and to be replaced
as soon as possible, thus leaving the whole amount intended for cir-
culation but four hundred millions; and four hundred millions of
treasury notes, bearing interest, and which it was hoped and believed
would not remain in circulation, as they could be made a legal tender
only for their face value, without interest.
FINANCIAL HISTORY, MONEY AND BANKING 693
B. The Greenback Situation as Seen by an Englishman, 1865 ^
Mr. Goldwin Smith, an eminent English historian, who spent many years
as a teacher in an American university, made public in 1865 his views on the
relation of the greenbacks to business. Mr. Smith freely criticized the finan-
cial poUcy of the government and pointed out its deadening effects on the
country's business. He predicted nothing less than financial disaster unless the
situation should improve. The most repulsive feature of the various laws under
which the greenbacks had been issued had to do with the legal tender clause.
His criticisms and views follow:
/ went to America, convinced that, amidst so much that was truly
great, the financial administration was the weak point; and I have re-
turned with that conviction terribly confirmed. The root of the mischiefs
I venture tojhink, is the Legal Tender Act.
That measure not only subverted the faith of private contracts,
but lowered the public credit, and is doubling the eventual burdens
of the country. It was popular with the debtor interest, because it
enabled the debtor to deprive his creditor of half the debt; and the
debtor interest included a large number of the farmers, either as mort-
gagors or as purchasers of land for which the full price had not been
paid. It has subjected persons living on fixed incomes, who for the
most part are politically weak and submissive, to a confiscation of
half their means of subsistence. It has deranged prices to such an
extent, that when I was in Illinois the wages of a skilled mechanic
equalled the salary fixed by the constitution for a judge; and it has
thereby multiplied strikes, and introduced into industrial relations
a malady which will not easily be expelled. It has filled trade with -
confusion and almost annihilated credit; and if it has thus indirectly
put a stop to a certain amount of gambling speculation, it has created
a speculation in gold more gambling than anything to which it has
put a stop. But its worst effects, and those which will be longest
felt, are the effects produced upon national credit and commercial
morality by every act of questionable legislation.
From the Legal Tender Act it was but a natural step to the pro-
posal made by a member of the Finance Committee, in unconscious
imitation of the Reign of Terror, for forcing greenbacks up to par by
penal legislation.
The advocates of the Legal Tender Act are loud in their praises
of a national paper currency. But the Legal Tender Act and a
national paper currency are, as a single glance at the financial facts
of Europe might show, quite distinct things; having no necessary
^ Bankers' Magazine (New York, 1864-5), XIX, 901-3.
694 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
connection with each other. And it is to be remembered that the
smash of a local *' wild-cat bank" is, at worst, a local evil; whereas, if
the national exchequer becomes a "wild-cat bank," and smashes.
the evil will be universal.
Within no long time it will be confessed that the Legal Tender
Act was the most wasteful, as well as the most unfair in its incidence,
of all imaginable systems of taxation.
If you touch upon the subject in America, the common answer is,
"You cannot talk; you suspended specie payments and made bank
notes a legal tender yourselves." Satisfied as they are apt to be with
this retort, Americans do not inquire what were the economical and
financial effects, immediate and ultimate, of a measure which, although
anterior to the general diffusion of knowledge on economical subjects,
was opposed by the most enlightened and upright economists of thi
time. Nor do they reflect that as our war was waged to a great extent
abroad, and by means of subsidies to foreign powers, it was necessaril\-
carried on partly in gold.
The melancholy part of the matter is, that the people demanded
nothing of this kind. The people were ready for a sound and vigorous
system of taxation, which would have sustained the pubHc credit,
and enabled the government to borrow what it needed in gold at a
reasonable rate. In this and in other matters the people are leagues
in advance of the politicians, who, bred under an evil system, are the
last to feel the influence of a great national regeneration. The Ameri-
can nation is a gallant horse, if it had but a more gallant rider.
Americans have hitherto lived in blessed ignorance of taxation and
finance. The consequence is a state of mind upon economical and
financial subjects — not among the great merchants and chiefs of
industry, who are, of course, most intelligent, but among the poli-
ticians and the mass of even educated men — which your correspond-
ent terms "empirical," and which he justly says is passing from em-
piricism into science by a somewhat expensive process. No fallacy
(in European estimation) is too exploded, no fancy too chimerical,
to find acceptance and do mischief. The vague notion prevails
that America, shooting ahead of the timid finance of the Old World,
has triumphantly dispensed with a specie currency, though the green-
back bears upon its face the flattering promise to pay specie, from
which it manifestly derives its whole value. Strange theories, tend-
ing in the same direction, began to grow out of the fact that, from
causes of which a very simple account may be given, real property
did not at first rise in price like other articles of commerce. The
FINANCIAL HISTORY, MONEY AND BANKING 695
highest financial authorities, if I am rightly informed, were convinced
that the fluctuations in the value of the paper currency were caused
merely by a sort of conflict between the currents of national and local
notes, the variations of which must have appeared to them to" coincide
curiously with those of military and political events. The President
himself is generally supposed to be the author of the plan for issuing a
description of stock not liable to seizure for debt, which would produce
some moral as well as economical phenomena of an interesting kind.
The buried arguments of our protectionists have risen again in
the New World; and the Americans, I fear, are in the minority, who
do not believe that, by forcing capital and industry from the more
remunerative to the less remunerative employment, a patriotic legis-
lator may increase the national wealth. If misgivings arise, there is
a ready appeal to the ''boundless resources" of the country, as though
untilled land and unwrought minerals, the possible elements of future
opulence, could satisfy the immediate demands of the public creditor;
as though they were anything more than natural powers, as valueless
in themselves as water or air, and dependent for their ultimate value,
in this case, on the influx of emigrant labor (which unsound eco-
nomical measures, by raising the cost of living, will exclude) and the
opening of internal lines of communication. In the last resort the
American reminds the objector that America is a new country, though
by what new laws of economy and finance it is governed, he would prob-
ably be at a loss to say. Adam Smith and the great European econo-
mists are little read; what is read in their place I forbear to describe.
These are disagreeable reflections. But the public liabilities,
claims for compensation included, must be approaching three thousand
millions of dollars; and the tax-paying spirit, which is now so high
that during the three months I passed in the country I hardly ever
heard a murmur, even from those who were most severely and unfairly
taxed, will sink when the excitement of the war is at an end, while a
conflict between different districts and interests, each trying to shift
the burden to the other, wiU too probably ensue. At present the
patriotism of the nation, its marvelous industry, the immensity of
its real wealth, its inteUigent fidelity to the government of its choice,
and readiness to support all honest endeavors for the pubHc good,
would most likely enable a really strong man to return to a sounder
system, and avert imminent disaster. But, unless a strong man
soon appears, aU that can be said, I fear, is that the Americans will
bear a financial catastrophe better, and recover from it more speedily,
than any other nation.
696 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
C. Fluclualions in the Value of Greenbacks^ 1864-1878 ^
Soon after the greenbacks were issued their value, measured in gold, began
to decline. From that time until the resumption of specie payments they con-
tinued to be worth less than gold. A general view of this depreciation as
reported by the Comptroller of the Currency follows:
Since 1863 the measure of value has been subject to such frequent
changes that business men, no matter how careful their calculations
or prudent their arrangements, have been continually deceived by the*
false regulator which measures every transaction. If any single day
is selected, for the purpose of comparison, from the business days of
each of the last sixteen years, the measure of value will be found to
have been as variable as the thermometer. This will be clearly seen
in the following table, which gives the value, in standard gold coin,
of the legal-tender paper dollar on July i of each year from 1864 to
1878, and also its value on November 18 of the present year:
1864
Cts.
1865
Cts.
1866
Cts.
1867
Cts.
1868
Cts.
1869
Cts.
1870
Cts.
1871
Cts.
38.7
70.4
66.0
71.7
70.1
73 5
85.6
89.0
1872
Cts.
1873
Cts.
1874
Cts.
1875
Cts.
1876
Cts.
1877
Cts.
1878
Cts.
1878
Cts.
87.5
86.4
91.0
87.2
89.2
94 5
99-4
99.8
In 1864 the value both of the Treasury note and the national-bank
note was less than thirty-nine cents to the dollar. They are now alike
worth ninety-nine and eighty-seven hundredths cents. It is within
the province of the present Congress to discountenance henceforth
in this country the use of a false and fluctuating measure of value,
and to insure in its stead the use of a measure which is everywhere
recognized as honest and true. . . .
D. Resumption of Specie Payments ^ i8yg *
A law of 1875 provided for the resumption of specie payments, on January i,
1879. To this end the Secretary of the Treasury collected a large supply of
gold with which to redeem the greenbacks on demand. Mr. John Sherman,
who was the Secretary of the Treasury when resumption took place, has
described the event as follows:
At the date of my last annual report, December 2, 1878, the prepa-
ration for the resumption of specie payments, provided for by the
* Report of the Comptroller of the Currency, 1878 (Washington, 1878), 25-6.
• Treasury Report, 1879 (Washington, 1879), ix-xii.
FINANCIAL HISTORY, MONEY AND BANKING 697
act approved January 14, 1875, had been substantially completed. On
the ist day of January, 1879, the day fixed for the resumption of specie
payments, the reserve of coin, over and above all matured liabilities,
was $133,508,804.50.
Previous to that time, in view of resumption, United States notes
and coin were freely received and paid in private business as equiv-
alents. Actual resumption commenced at the time fixed by law,
without any material demand for coin and without disturbance to
public or private business. No distinction has been made since
that time between coin and United States notes in the collection of
duties or in the payment of the principal or interest of the public
debt. The great body of coin indebtedness has been paid in United
States notes at the request of the creditors. The total amount of
United States notes presented for redemption from January t to
November i, 1879, was $11,256,678. But little coin has been de-
manded on the coin liabilities of the Government during the same
period, though the amount accrumg exceeded $600,000,000. Mean-
time coin was freely paid into the Treasury, and gold bullion was
deposited in the assay office and paid for in United States notes. The
aggregate gold and silver coin and bullion in the Treasury increased,
during that period, from $167,558,734.19 to $225,133,558.72, and the
net balance available for resumption increased from $133,508,804.50
to $152,737,155.48.
In accordance with the position taken in the last annual report,
United States notes have been received, since January i, last, in pay-
ment of duties on imports.
To meet the local demand for coin, in places other than New York
City, persons applying have been paid silver coin for United States
notes, the coin being delivered to them on estabUshed express-lines
free of expense: and for some time gold and silver coin has been freely
paid out at the several subtreasuries upon current obligations of the
Government. There has been, however, but little demand for coin,
and United States notes and the circulating-notes of national banks
have been received and paid out at par with coin in all business trans-
actions, public or private, in all parts of the country.
The specie standard, thus happily secured, has given an impetus
to all kinds of business. Many industries, greatly depressed
since the panic of 1873, have revived, while increased activity
has been shown in all branches of production, trade, and com-
merce. Every preparation for resumption was accompanied
with increased business and confidence, and its consummation has
698 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
been followed by a revival of productive industry unexampled in
our previous history.
It is made the duty of this Department to maintain resumption,
and for this purpose, in addition to the use of surplus revenue and the
fund for resumption purposes, the Secretary is authorized to issue,
sell, and dispose of, at not less than par in coin, either four, four and
a half, or five per cent, bonds of the description set out in the refund-
ing act, approved July 14, 1870. This act is based upon the idea
that all necessary expenditures of the Government appropriated for
by Congress, will be met by the current revenues, leaving the surplus
revenues and the reserve-fund available for resumption. It is also
provided by that act that the amount of United States notes to be
redeemable on demand in coin shall be gradually reduced to the sum
of $300,000,000. The act approved May 31, 1878, increases the maxi-
mum of United States notes, upon which resumption is to be main-
tained, to the sum of $346,681,016, the amount outstanding at the
date of the passage of the act. It also provides as follows:
'* And when any of said notes may be redeemed or be received into
the Treasury under any law from any source whatever and shall belong
to the United States, they shall not be retired cancelled or destroyed,
but tKey shall be reissued and paid out again and kept in cir-
culation.". . .
The great convenience and easy transportation of notes has thus
far enabled the Treasury to exchange them for coin or bullion at all
the centers of production of gold and silver in this country, and also
to pay for large sums of foreign coin at the assay office in New York
without any material draft on the resumption fund; and it is believed
that this voluntary exchange will, in ordinary times, furnish the Treas-
ury with all the coin necessary. It would be only in an emergency
not easy to foresee, and not likely to arise, that the power to sell
bonds for resumption purposes would be exercised, but it should be
preserved to meet any extraordinary demand for the redemption of
notes which might possibly occur.
The Secretary is, therefore, of opinion that the provisions of exist-
ing law are ample to enable the Department to maintain resumption
even upon the present volume of United States notes. In view, how-
ever, of the large inflow of gold into the country and the high price of
public securities, it would seem to be a favourable time to invest a por-
tion of the sinking fund in United States notes, to be retired and can-
celed, and in this way gradually to reduce the maximum of such notes
to the sum of $300,000,000, the amount fixed by the resumption act.
FINANCIAL HISTORY, MONEY AND BANKING 699
The Secretary respectfully calls the attention of Congress to the
question whether United States notes ought still to be a legal-tender
in the payment of debts. The power of Congress to make them such
was asserted by Congress during the war, and was upheld by the
Supreme Court. The power to reissue them in time of peace, after
they are once redeemed, is still contested in that court. Prior to
1862, only gold and silver were a legal-tender. Bullion was deposited
by private individuals in the mints and coined in convenient forms
and designs, indicating weight. and fineness. Paper money is a prom-
ise to pay such coin. No constitutional objection is raised against
the issue of notes not bearing interest to be used as a part of the cir-
culating medium.
The chief objection to the emission of paper money by the Govern-
ment grows out of the legal-tender clause, for without this the United
States note would be measured by its convenience in use, its safety,
and its prompt redemption. In war, and during a grave public
exigency, other considerations may properly prevail; but it would
seem that during peace, and, especially, during times of prosperity
and surplus revenue, the promissory note of the United States ought
to stand like any other promissory note. It should be current money
only by being promptly redeemed in coin on demand. The note
of the United States is now received for all public dues, it is carefully
limited in amount, it is promptly redeemed on demand, and ample
reserves in coin are provided to give confidence in and security for
such redemption. With these conditions maintained, the United
States note will be readily received and paid on all demands. While
they are maintained, the legal-tender clause gives no additional
credit or sanction to the notes, but tends to impair confidence and
to create fears of overissue. It would seem, therefore, that now and
during the maintenance of resumption it is a useless and objectionable
assertion of power, which Congress might now repeal on the ground
of expediency alone. When it is considered that its constitutionality
is seriously contested, and that from its nature it is subject to grave
abuse, it would now appear to be wise to withdraw the exercise of
such a power, leaving it in reserve to be again resorted to in such a
period of war or grave emergency as existed in 1862.
The Government derives an advantage in circulating its notes
without interest, and the people prefer such notes to coin, as money,
for their convenience in use and their certain redemption in coin on
demand. This mutual advantage may be secured without the exer-
cise of questionable power; nor need any inconvenience arise from the
700 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
repeal of the legal-tender clause as to future contracts. Contracting
parties may stipulate for either gold or silver coin or current money.
In the absence of an expressed stipulation for coin the reasonable pre-
sumption would exist that the parties contemplated payment in cur-
rent money, and such presumption might properly be declared by
law and the contract enforced accordingly.
The Secretary, therefore, respectfully submits to Congress whether
the legal-tender clause should not now be repealed as to all future
contracts, and parties be left to stipulate the mode of payment.
The United States notes should still be receivable for all dues to
the Government, they should be properly redeemed on demand and
ample provision made to secure such redemption.
III. The National Banking System
A. Inadequacy of State Banking, i86j ^
Even during the years preceding the Civil War, state banking in many
parts of the country had been inadequate, but with the coming of war and the
suspension of specie payments that system practically broke down. Senator
John Sherman- of Ohio spoke of the situation in 1863 as follows:
. . . The question is between a national currency and a currency
issued by State corporations, or a mixture of both. Now, I wish to
state very briefly the objections to local banks; and I am here bound
to say that I have always been friendly to banks, and am now inter-
ested in a bank.
The objections to local banks are obvious. Senators will recognize
them and feel their force when I state them. The first is the great
number and diversity of bank charters. There are sixteen hundred
and forty-two banks in the United States, established by the laws of
twenty-eight different States, and these laws are as diverse, I was
about to say, as the human countenance. They are established
upon various bases. We have the State bank system with its
branches. We have the independent system, sometimes secured by
bonds, sometimes State bonds, sometimes by real estate, sometimes
a mixture of both. We have every diversity of bank system in this
country that has been devised by the wit of man, and all these banks
have a power to issue paper money, competing daily with the national
currency. With this multiplicity of banks, depending upon different
organizations, it is impossible to have a uniform national currency,
* CongressiotuU Globe, 1862-3 (Washington 1863), Appendix, 50.
FINANCIAL HISTORY, MONEY AND BANKING 701
for the value of our national currency is constantly affected by the
issues of this multitude of State banks. There is no common regu-
lator; they are dependent on different systems. The clearing-house
system adopted in the city of New York, only applies to that city.
It cannot be effective when extended over a great region of country.
There is no check or control over these banks. There is a want of
harmony and concert among them. Whenever a failure occurs, such
as that of the Ohio Life Insurance and Trust Company, it operates
like a panic in a disorganized army: all of them close their doors at
once and suspend specie payments.
There is another objection to these local banks, and it is one which
we cannot disregard, and that is their unequal distribution among
the States. In New England the circulation of the banks is now about
$50,000,000, while in Ohio, a State with three fourths of the population
of all New England, it is but $9,000,000. When you make the con-
trast with other States, it is still more marked. We, in the West, are
now using the paper money of the New England and New York banks,
and we are paying to the East the interest on $40,000,000, which we
would much rather, in these times of difficulty, pay- to the United
States. The western people would be better satisfied now if they
had the notes or the United States instead of the $40,000,000 of eastern
bank bills that are circulating among them. According to a recent
statement, which I have before me, the circulation of banks in the
eastern States has now reached about $130,000,000; and of that
amount one third is computed to be in the western country. I have
no doubt that we are now circulating in the West $40,000,000 of paper
money issued by the banks of the East. Much of it seeks the West
as a medium of exchange for our agricultural productions. We are
using this money, and the banks are deriving a profit of the interest
on that money. If this paper was driven out of circulation, and the
United States notes should fill the vacuum, it would make a contribu-
tion to the Treasury of the United States of $2,400,000, for the mere
interest of a currency which we do not prefer, but are now compelled
to use because it is circulated among us.
The losses to the people by counterfeiting never can be avoided
when you have such a multitude of banks. It requires now skilled
experts to detect counterfeits. People have made this business of
counterfeiting so perfect that it is difficult for the best experts to detect
them; it now depends as well on the general appearance of the holder
as of the note. When a stranger presents a bank bill for circulation,
the person about to receive it looks rather at the man who presents
702 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
it to see whether his face is honest, than at the bill to detect whether
it is counterfeit or not. It is impossible to avoid counterfeiting,
or to provide guards against it. Bank experts may save the banks,
but the loss still falls upon the people. You cannot prevent the people
from suffering largely from counterfeiting when you have sixteen
hundred different banks, issuing each of them several different kinds
of bills, under the laws of twenty-eight different States. On the other
hand, by the substitution of the national currency we substantially
lose nothing by counterfeiting. When the notes are few in kind,
only three or four of them, all issued by the United States, all of
uniform character, they cannot be counterfeited, because their face
will become so familiar that every man will know a genuine note;
he will detect it in a moment as the countenance of a familiar friend.
But when he has to decide on the issues of sixteen hundred banks,
how is it possible for an ordinary citizen to detect the counterfeit?
The loss to the people of the United States by broken bank bills
is computed to be equivalent to five per cent, of the entire issue.
Every twenty years it is supposed that the entire bank circulation
ceases to exist or deteriorates. Some banks pass through the storm
and their notes are good, but probably two or three are successively-
scattered as wrecks along the wayside, until it is now computed b}-
intelligent bankers that the loss to the people of the United States,
over and above the loss of interest, by the simple process of broken
bank bills, is five per cent, per annum. This cannot be guarded
against by all your laws. Why, sir, when the system of free bankin<:
was established in the western country, all those who were friendly to
banks, and I was among them, said, ''now we have a stable issue;
we have bank bills based upon the bonds of the States, and it is not
possible that these bonds will ever deteriorate in value and the people
lose money." And yet, sir, within two years from the establishment
of this system, by the depreciation of the bonds of the States, or b\-
fraud, these notes became depreciated, and in some cases were of no
value whatever. In some cases the bonds were abstracted; in some
cases frauds were committeed by bank officers. From some cause or
other these notes that we all supposed to be upon a stable basis dis-
appeared like snow before the summer's sun. The people are con-
stantly losing by them, and you cannot by the wisdom of man guard
against the frauds and peculations, the genius of rascality to which
men sometimes engaged in this business resort. I wish to cast no
reflection whatever on persons engaged in banking, but naturally
rogues will resort to this business because it is one in which they ma>'
FINANCIAL HISTORY, MONEY AND BANKING 703
sometimes by deception issue worthless promises to pay without
punishment or exposure.
The loss of exchange by local currency is very great. Ordinarily,
the exchange from the West to the East is one per cent. This loss
is usually made a gain to themselves by the bankers and shavers.
The suction of this class of people is equivalent to one per cent, of the
circulation. In the western country you cannot buy a draft without
paying this exchange; and I have known it as high as ten per cent.
This difference of exchange is a common cover for usurious interest.
Plain farmers wishing to borrow money are required to draw drafts
on New York, by which contrivance they pay usurious interest. All
this exchange is a loss to the people. Even in the most favorable
time, in a favorable state of trade between the East and the West,
an exchange of one per cent, is demanded for drafts and bills of ex-
change, simply because the notes of the East are worth more than
those of the West. But if you had a national currency, uniform and
equal throughout the country, the cost of exchange to the people
would only be the cost of transfer from one portion of the country
to the other. From Cincinnati to New York it would be only one tenth
of one per cent., and it could not be higher if the only basis of exchange
was gold and silver, or the paper money of the United States, which
can be transferred from one section to the other for from one tenth
to one eighth of one per cent.
There is a still more serious objection to this paper money. With
a system of local banks there is no power to control over-issues and
consequent depreciation of currency. By enlarging the volume of
currency, it depreciates the value of United States notes; and even
now, when the United States have issued $250,000,000 of notes, the
banks have increased their circulation. Why? Because they can
make money by its increase, and that consideration will always
control private individuals. We cannot say that it would not control
us; if we had the legal authority to issue money, and found that we
could make money by the issue, we should find reason enough for
issuing it. Men will always be governed by their interests.
I have before me a table which has been carefully prepared, show-
ing that on the ist of January, 1862, in the loyal States, there was a
circulation of $129,000,000. Now it is $167,000,000. What power
have you over this? How can you prevent this increase? You
cannot do it except by taxation. The banks are governed by the
local laws of the States in which they are situated. Those local laws
are beyond your power; you have no way to reach them except by
704 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
a system of taxation. They may go on making this increase from
$167,000,000 to $500,000,000, until all the values in this country are
destroyed, depending upon a baseless issue, the redemption of which
you cannot guaranty. I have here, from the Bankers' Magazine,
a statement showing where this large increase has occurred. In
the city of New York there has been an increase, since the ist of
January, of iQiViT P^'* cent.; in the State of Massachusetts there has
been an increase of 4i^oV P^'^ cent.; in the State of New Hampshire
there has been an increase of 27yoT P^^ cent.; in the city of Phila-
delphia there has been an increase of 138 iVV P^'' cent.; until the
sagacity of the bankers began to notice the increase and suspected
the money of the banks issuing the large increase. In the western
country, for local reasons that I need not mention, on account of the
existence of the limitations in the. charters of the banks of Ohio and
Indiana, this increase has not gone on so rapidly; but even in Ohio
there has been an increase, and a considerable increase, of the paper
money.
B. Superiority of the National Banking System, 1868 ^
The first year of the war made it evident that the prevailing state banking
system was inadequate. Consequently an agitation arose to place banking
under the control of the federal government, with the result that Congress in
1863 provided for the national banking system. To bring the banking opera-
tions of the country still further within the control of the federal government,
an act of 1865 imposed a ten per cent tax on state bank notes. Both acts
were justified on the ground that business" demanded a rriore uniform and stable
currency than was in circulation at the time. At first the number of national
banks increased more slowly than the friends of the system had anticipated.
It soon became evident, however, to those who were in the best position to
judge that the system possessed real merit. The Banker's Magazme expressed
such an opinion in 1868, as follows:
The revolution which has taken place in the United States, within
the last five years, in the systems of Banking and Currency, is without
a parallel in history, in respect both to its extent and its completeness.
On the first day of January, 1862, there were, in the several States
(including those in rebellion, according to their latest returns to the
Secretary of the Treasury), 1,496 banks, with a capital of $420,000,000.
They existed under the laws of twenty-nine States, and they had dif-
ferent privileges, and were subject to different obligations. All of
them were banks of issue, and they had in circulation notes to the
amount of $184,000,000. These notes had only a local currency,
> Bankers' Magazine (New York, 1867-8), XXII, 681-2, 690, 695.
FINANCIAL HISTORY, MONEY AND BANKING 705
more or less restricted, and were not of equal value. Many of them
continued to be at par with gold until the suspension of specie pay-
ments in December, 1861, and had for a long time enjoyed the con-
fidence of the public, although the safeguards by which their credit
was maintained differed essentially in different States. Thus, in
New England, the safety of the bill-holder was secured by the daily
redemption of all New England bank-notes in Boston; in New York,
by the pledge of stocks of adequate value with the Banking Depart-
ment; in New Orleans, Kentucky, and Indiana (so far as the issues
of the State Bank were concerned), by the magnitude of their coin
reserves. But in many of the Western States the banks were insol-
vent, and their currency greatly depreciated. Thus, in Illinois, eighty-
nine banks had failed, and their bills were redeemed by the State
auditor, at rates varying from fifty per cent, to par. In Wisconsin,
the notes of thirty-nine banks were discredited; and in Minnesota
nearly all of them were in liquidation.
The "Act to provide a National Currency, secured by a pledge
of United States bonds, and to provide for the circulation and redemp-
tion thereof," was passed on the 25th of February, 1863. It was re-
enacted in a new draft, not essentially differing from the original law,
on the 3d of June, 1864. Under the provisions of these statutes,
the banks of the several States have ceased to exist as banks of issue,
and nearly all of them have become National associations.
On the first day of October, 1867, there were 1,637 National banks
in operation, having a capital of $420,000,000 (the exact capital of
the State banks in 1862), and circulating notes to the amotint of
$294,000,000; while only four millions of the State bank issues were
still outstanding. The notes of the National banks are secured by
a deposit of $338,000,000 in Federal bonds, by a first and paramount
lien on all the assets of the banks, by a personal liability of the share-
holders to an amount greater than the circulation, and by the absolute
guaranty of the Government; while their convertibility is further
protected by the obligation of the government to redeem them in-
stantly at the Federal Treasury, if the bank by which they are issued
shall fail to redeem them on presentation at its counter. Thus
fortified, the National bank notes are of equal value throughout the
Union, whatever may be the place of issue.
The question is now before the country, whether this system of
banking shall be maintained or overthrown. The decision of it rests
with Congress, and there is no one of the financial problems, which
are waiting for the solution of that body, more important to the public
7o6 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
welfare. If, after a fair trial, the National banking system has proved
a failure, let it be condemned; but it will be unbecoming the dignity
of the National Legislature to pronounce such a condemnation without
the fullest consideration of what it involves. . . .
1. In enumerating the advantages, which we claim for the National
Banking system, we place first, therefore, the uniformity which it has
introduced into both the currency and the banking of the country. It is
an important point gained, when any of the great departments, into
which the business of a country is divided, can be carried on, in all
parts of a wide territory, on the same principles, and under the same
regulations. The tendency of the time is toward the organization,
and even the consolidation, of great business enterprises. Witness
the important operations which have been recently effected in the
consolidation of railway, telegraph, and express property, and the
arrangement of far-reaching lines for merchandise transportation.
But it is more important, that this principle of co-operation, and
uniform organization, should prevail in banking, than in any other
business, because its special office is to regulate the machinery of
the exchanges, of credit, and of the circulation. The banks have
been constantly striving to attain this end without legislation. The
Clearing House system is the crowning triumph of this principle
of voluntary organization. . . .
2. The second important advantage which we claim for the
National Bank system, is the safety of the currency. We have seen
that the plan of securing the circulation by a pledge of public stocks,
was not original with MR. CHASE. It had been tried, with varied
results, in several of the States. In New York it had operated well,
because the bonds of that State were secured; but it had failed in
Indiana, Wisconsin, and Illinois, because the securities received as a
basis for the circulation were not sound. It is obvious, therefore,
that the principle of securing the bank-note by a pledge of State
stocks, was not of itself a sufficient safeguard, while there is so great a
difference in the value of State obligations; nor would it have been
possible for the Federal Government, in fixing a basis for the circula-
tion which it desired to issue, to admit the bonds of any State, without
receiving those of all, since any discrimination in favor of the richer
States, would naturally have given offense to the poorer. The
Federal bonds, being the common debt of the nation, were the only
securities, adequate in amount to furnish a basis for the circulation,
or which were of equal value and obligation in all the States. In
adopting them as a basis of banking, we followed not only the earliest
FINANCIAL HISTORY, MONEY AND BANKING 707
practice of our own Government, but also that of the most enlightened
countries of Europe. ...
C. Development of Banking, iSyg-igog ^
Since the Civil War banking has had a remarkable growth in the United
States. State and private banks and trust companies as well as national banks
have enjoyed an increasing prosperity. A view of this development during the
thirty years prior to 1909 follows:
In [1886, state banks] . . . were far outnumbered both by private
and by national banks, but by 1899 they were the most numerous class
of banking institutions in the United States. Since 1899 their rate
of increase has been even greater. The following table shows the
number of national banks, state banks, private banks, and trust
companies at certain dates:
1879
1884
1889
1894
1899
1904
1909
National banks
State banks
2,048
813
2,545
37
2,625
1,017
3,458
44
3,239
2,097
4,215
63
3,770
3,705
3,844
228
3,583
4,253
4,168
276
5,331
6,984
5,484
924
6,893
11,292
4,407
1,079
Private banks
Trust companies
Of the whole number of banks and trust companies in the United
States on January i, 1910, nearly one-half were state banks; and, if
we deduct from the number of private banks the large number of
brokers so classified who do not do a banking business, the state banks
are considerably more than one-half of the total. In 1879 less than
one-sixth of the total number of banks and trust companies were state
banks.
The increase in the number of state banks has by no means been
uniform in the different sections of the country. The number of
state banks in the different groups of States for the years 1879, 1889,
1899, and 1909 is shown in the following table [on page 708]:
It will be noted that the greatest increase in the number of state
banks has been in the Southern, Middle Western, Western, and
Pacific States. In the New England States the number of state
banks is exactly the same as in 1879, and in the Eastern States the
> increase in the number of state banks has been small. . . .
^ State Banks and Trust Companies Since the Passage of the National-Bank Act.
By George E. Barnett. National Monetary Commission (Washington, 191 1),
201-4.
7o8
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
Number and percetitage of increase of state banks, by groups of States, for the years
1879, i88g, 1899, and 1909
1879
1889
1899
1909
Group
Number
Number
Percent-
age of
increase
Number
Percent-
age of
increase
Number
Percent-
age of
increase
New England . .
Eastern
Southern
Middle Western
Western
Pacific
19
189
204
29s
42
64
22
253
464
675
528
155
16
34
127
129
1,157
142
23
334
1,071
1,594
956
275
5
32
131
136
81
77
19
387
3,312
3,717
3,026
831
-17
16
209
133
216
202
f
Total
813
2,097
158
4,253
102
11,292
165
In the New England and Eastern States, the state banks fall far
behind both the national banks and the trust companies in number
as well as in aggregate capital. Only a Uttle more than 2 per cent
of the capital invested in the New England States in the three classes
of banking institutions is represented by the capital of the state
banks. The state banks are somewhat more important in the East-
em States, but less than 10 per cent of the banking capital in this
group of States is represented by the capital of the state banks. In
all the other groups of States the state banks are more numerous than
either the national banks or trust companies. In none of these
groups, however, is the capital invested so great as that invested in
national banks, although in all of them it is greater than the amount
invested in trust companies. In the Western and Pacific groups, how-
ever, the amount of the capital of the state banks approximates that of
the national banks. In the Southern States the capital of the state
banks is in amount nearly four-fifths of that of the national banks, and
in the Middle Western States a little more than one-half. . . .
The rapid increase in the number of trust companies began much
later than the increase in the number of state banks. The number
in the entire United States did not exceed 100 until 1888, and the
number of accessions was not large until 1899. Since that time the
increase has been very rapid. According to the reports made to the
National Monetary Commission, on April 28, 1909, nearly 1,100
trust companies were actively engaged in business.
FINANCIAL HISTORY, MONEY AND BANKING 709
The great development of the trust company has been ahnost
entirely in the New England, Eastern, and, to a less extent, in the
Middle Western States. Nearly one-half of all the trust companies
in the United States are in the New England States, Pennsylvania,
and New York. . . . The capital of the New England trust companies
is approximately one-third of that Of the New England national banks,
and the capital of the trust companies of the Eastern States is nearly
two- thirds of that of the national banks in those States. In both
of these groups the trust companies are far more numerous and of a
much greater aggregate capital than the state banks. In the Southern,
Middle Western, Western, and Pacific groups the trust companies are
far less numerous and far less important, measured by the amount of
their capital, than either the national or the state banks.
D. Expected Benefits of the Federal Reserve Act,\Qi4 ^
The new banking law of 19 14 was the result of a long-drawn-out agitation
for reform in government regulation of national banks. The benefits expected
to be derived from the new law were stated by Mr. Williams, Comptroller of
the Currency, as follows:
The Federal reserve act, approved by President Wilson on De-
cember 23, 1913, is designed not only to cure weaknesses and defects
of the currency system under which we have struggled, and sometimes
staggered, in the past, as we have outgrown the conditions and passed
beyond the circumstances which it was especially provided to meet,
but to offer to the people of this country many new advantages and
opportunities, while emancipating business from many evils, diffi-
culties, and troubles with which it has been burdened and from which
it has found no escape.
Among the principal direct benefits which the new act confers
are these:
First, it supplies a circulating medium absolutely safe, which will
command its face value in all parts of the country, and which is suffi-
ciently elastic to meet readily the periodical demands for additional
currency, incident to the movement of the crops, also responding
promptly to increased industrial or commercial activity, while re-
tiring from use automatically when the legitimate demands for it
have ceased. Under the operation of this law such financial and com-
mercial crises, or "panics," as this country experienced in 1873,
in 1893, 3-nd again in 1907, with their attendant misfortunes and pros-
trations, seem to be mathematically impossible.
^ Report of the Comptroller of the Currency, IQ14 (Washington, 1914), I, 10-12.
7IO READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
Second^ it provides effectually and scientifically for the mobiliza-
tion of bank reserves in the 12 Federal reserve districts, where these
funds are not only available for the member banks of each respective
district, but, under wise and well-guarded provisions of the law, the
surplus moneys of any one district become available for the legitimate
needs of any other districts which may require them.
Third, it eliminates the indirect tax of many millions of dollars
annually upon the commerce and industry of the country, heretofore
imposed in the shape of collection or ''exchange" charges on checks,
and inaugurates a system of clearances by which it is expected that
every check or draft on any member bank in any one of the 1 2 Federal
reserve districts can be collected ultimately free of the exchange
charges heretofore exacted and may be charged on the books of the
Federal reserve bank to the account of the bank upon which drawn,
in most cases, within 24 hours or less after it is deposited with a
member bank. This provision renders available many hundreds of
millions of dollars heretofore carried in transit in the mails in expensive
and tedious processes of collection, sometimes absolutely useless during
weeks when much needed, held in transit moving from point to point.
Fourth, it furnishes a discount system by which every well-man-
aged member bank may have the opportunity of converting into
money by rediscounting, to such extent as may be necessar}^ or desir-
able, all commercial paper having not more than three months to run
which it may have taken in the ordinary course of its business. The
new law removes, so far as borrowing money from a Federal reserve
bank is concerned, the limitation which prevented a national bank
from borrowing an amount in excess of 100 per cent of its capital.
The significance of this release may be appreciated when it is realized
that some national banks have deposits amounting to 10 times their
capital or more. The ability to borrow only an amount equal to
capital would be wholly insufficient, in many cases, to enable banks
to meet the demands which arise from unexpected runs, or in financial
crises, or other extraordinary demands.
It removes from prosperous and well-managed banks penalties
hitherto imposed on their very prosperity and success.
It relieves the well-managed bank from the limitations of original
capital invested and gives it the legitimate advantages of its own
enterprise and the business it has built up and actually does.
Fifth, by making it possible for any well-managed bank to con\'crt
its assets readily into cash to meet unexpected contingencies or runs,
the necessity for the larger reserves heretofore required ceases. It
FINANCIAL HISTORY, MONEY AND BANKING 711
is estimated that by this reduction in the reserve requirements alone
more than four hundred miUions of dollars of money or credits here-
tofore held in reserves and inert, will become available for commercial
purposes and the legitimate demands of business.
Sixth, the new law also makes it possible for national banks to
lend money on improved, unencumbered farm property, thus enabling
farmers, the most numerous and in many respects most important
portion of our population to participate directly in the beneficent
provisions of the new law.
Seventh, the new law provides that national banks may estabHsh
branches in foreign countries, these branches to be under the juris-
diction and subject to the rules, regulations, and examinations of
the comptroller's office. These branch banks should be material
aids in building up our foreign commerce.
Eighth, the former system of paying national bank examiners by
fee is abolished; and the examinations of all member banks, both
National and State, are now placed upon a basis which necessarily
will insure a thoroughness and efficiency hitherto impossible.
Under the provisions of the new law the failure of efficiently and
honestly managed banks is practically impossible and a closer watch
can be kept on member banks. Opportunities for a more thorough
and complete examination are furnished for each particular bank.
These facts should reduce the dangers from dishonest and incompetent
management to a minimum. It is hoped that national-bank failures
can hereafter be virtually eliminated.
Ninth, the establishment of a system of bank acceptances and an
open market for commercial paper, which, it is believed, will aid and
facilitate this country in obtaining a larger share of international
trade and of the world's commerce.
IV. The Silver Question
A. The "Crime of '73''^
In 1873 Congress enacted a new coinage law in which no provision was
made for coining the standard silver dollar. During the free silver discussion
that followed the friends of silver declared that the act had been passed without
free and full discussion of its provisions. They referred to it as the " Crime of
'73." Senator John P. Jones, of Nevada, stated the position of the free silver
men as follows:
Mr. JONES said:
Mr. President: The act of February 12, 1873, . . . which
Congressional Record, 1875-6 (Washington, 1876), Appendix 67, 78, 88, 97.
712 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
under the guise of regulating the mints of the United States, practically
abolished one of the precious metals, was a grave wrong; a wrong
committed no doubt unwittingly, yet no less certainly, in the interest
of a few plutocrats in England and in Germany and as certainly in
the interest of the entire pagan and barbarian world; a wrong upon
the people of the United States and of the whole civilized globe; a
wrong upon industry, upon the natural tendency of wealth toward
equalization, upon the liberties of peoples which are born out of the
effects of such equalization of wealth, upon every aspiration of man
which depends for its realization upon the development of those
liberties.
The act alluded to practically abolished one of the precious metals
as money, the one chiefly produced in this country, the one chiefly
consumed in the semi-civilized countries of Asia, and the one which
at the date of its abolition and under the time-honored laws that
previously prevailed was becoming, as it has since become, the more
available metal of the two in which to transact exchanges and liquidate
debt. . . .
But the manner in which this legislation was affected leaves but
little reason to infer that any deliberate judgment was exercised on
this important subject of the standard, or that the question was ever
so presented to the American people as to elicit the indorsement or
the approval of any single congressional constituency. The bill by
which it was effected originated, as I understand it, in another bill
which was introduced into the House of Representatives February 9,
1872. It was discussed for a few moments on April 9, 1872. Then
the discussion was cut short, and a substitute, the present law, reported
by title on May 27, and passed without a reading, under a suspension
of the rules. May 29, 1872. From the House it went to the Senate,
where, without any discussion at all upon the all-important section
14, it passed; and, after concurrence by the House, again without a
discussion, became a law.
I am aware that it has been stated that the bill was passed after
very full discussion on this subject; but I am unable to find a corrobo-
ration of this statement in the official rep)ort of the proceedings. If
any such full discussion appears in the Congressional Globe, I shall be
glad to have it pointed out in order that I may correct the impression
now on my mind in respect of this matter. . . .
At the bottom of this dangerous effort to abolish the double stand-
ard of this country lie nothing but selfishness and injustice — the
selfishness of a class who desire to receive payment for debts and obliga-
FINANCIAL HISTORY, MONEY AND BANKING 713
tions in a metal which, for the moment, and at the mean natural
relation, is a few per cent, dearer than the other. . .
Opposed to the consummation of this injustice, not only does all
nature array herself, but so also do the unconscious instincts of human-
ity, the occult working of social institutions. Consummate it if you
can, and you will have poverty, distress, commotion, and perhaps
revolution. Having consummated it, try then to undo it, and you
will find the task beset with great difficulties.
Neglected dislocations of the human frame are difficult to remedy;
because the wrenched member finds for itself a new socket. The
dislocation of the social fabric which threatens to result from the effects
of the act of 1873 may yet be averted by the timely measure of restor-
ing the double standard before we attempt to resume specie payments.
You cannot expect to take a nation by the throat, hold it down,
squeeze the last drop of substance out of it, no matter in what sacred
name, whether of honor or justice, without running the risk of being
taken by the throat yourselves. No matter how cunning the injus-
tice is, it is sure to be found out when it comes to work, and sure to
be avenged when it is found out. All the interests of society, even
the safety and permanence of vested interests, demand the exercise
of equity in the affairs of government; and I tell those who repre-
sent such interests that, in the long run, they will best consult their
advantage in being just at the outset. They got the people of this
country by the throat in the ambiguously worded act of February 25,
1862. They pinned the people down by the coin-paying act of March
18, 1869, and now they would squeeze the last drop of substance out
of them by the single gold standard act of February, 1873, which they
propose to carry into effect by the resumption act (a very proper act
of itself) of 1875. And now my advice to them is, to stop and undo
the worst part of their work, by repeaUng so much of the act of 1873
as prevents the silver dollar from being tendered for the payment of
debts. The people have paid their full ransom to Brennus; let him
not attempt to overload the scale with the weight of his sword, or they
may take it up and use it. . . .
I have done. For the patience and attention with which Senators
have listened to an exposition unusually lengthy and somewhat
tedious, I thank them, and can only plead the transcendent impor-
tance of the subject.
There is yet time to undo the work of 1873, to correct the grave
blunder perpetrated by the mint act of that year, in interdicting the
American silver dollar and substituting the single standard of gold for
714 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
the money of the Constitution. The disastrous effects which, in my
opinion, are bound to flow from this attenuation of the standard and
the basis of prices and credit are not yet felt because of the existing
suspension of specie payments; but so soon as specie payments are
resumed — if indeed they can ever be resumed without the restoration
and co-ordination of silver in the standard — will the bad effects of
this legislation develop themselves and make their mark upon the
affairs of the country. It may then be too late to reform.
The present is therefore the acceptable time to undo the unwitting
and inconsiderate work of 1873, and to render our legislation upon the
subject of money consistent with the physical facts concerning the
stock and supply of the precious metals throughout the world and
conformable to the Constitution of the country.
We cannot, we dare not, avoid speedy action upon this subject.
Not only do reason, justice, and authority unite in urging us to re-
trace our steps, but the organic law commands us to do so, and the
presence of peril enjoins what the law commands. . . .
B. The Coinage Act of i8yj Defended ^
Senator Jones' charge that the coinage law of 1873 had been passed as the
result of underhand legislation did not go unanswered. Senator John Sherman
of Ohio defended the act as follows:
. . . Perhaps there is no law on the statute-book that received
more thorough consideration than the act of 1873, which is entitled
" An act revising and amending the laws relative to the mints, assay
offices, and coinage of the United States." It is a long law, covering,
I think, twelve pages of the Statutes of the United States, and was
approved February 12, 1873. That act was first introduced from the
Treasury Department in January, I think, 1870, more than three
years before it passed. It was discussed at some length in the Senate;
was then printed and sent all over the country to every person who
was familiar with the subject, especially to California, to Nevada,
the Mint at Philadelphia, and largely to Europe; and it was thoroughly
examined. It came back, and in the following session, that is, the
session of 1870 and 187 1, it passed the Senate of the United States.
Subsequently the bill failed in the House for want of time in that Con-
gress. At the next session, however, it was introduced in the House
of Representatives. It was there discussed, and finally passed the
House of Representatives and came to the Senate, the same bill in
* Congressional Record, 187$-^ (Washington, 1876), 2734-S-
FINANCIAL HISTORY, MONEY AND BANKING 715
effect that had previously passed the Senate of the United States.
In the Senate it was again examined, rediscussed, considered, and
passed. So that this bill really was pending in Congress nearly four
years, and it was discussed in every stage of its progress. It was
examined by experts not only in this country but in Europe. It was
prepared at the Treasury Department, and largely prepared by Mr.
Patterson, of Philadelphia, who is now, probably, the most eminent
authority in this country on the subject, and by Dr. Linderman, and
others. It was submitted to all classes, and especially to persons
living in California and other parts of the country interested in the
production of gold and silver.
There is another thing to which I wish to call attention. The act
of 1873 di<i i^ot make any essential change in the then existing law.
The only change of importance in the previous law made by the act
of 1873 was made at the request of the interests in California. That
is, the trade-dollar was introduced as a mercantile dollar to enable
them to send in a convenient form the production of silver in this
country to China. This was the only change made in the then exist-
ing law of any material character. The bill itself was but a codifica-
tion and revision of the laws relating to the mints of the United States
and the coinage of the United States, changing but slightly any mate-
rial features of the existing laws. The proposition about the trade-
dollar was introduced at the request of merchants and dealers
in bullion in San Francisco, and was intended simply as a means
of enabling them to put in the best and most valuable form
the silver bullion of the country with a view to its exportation to
China and Japan.
My honorable friend from Nevada in his long and carefully pre-
pared speech has gone upon the idea that the act of 1873 in some way
demonetized silver. What I have stated shows that it did not in
the slightest degree demonetize silver. My friend from Missouri
(Mr. Bogy) was perfectly correct in saying that so far as the silver
coins were concerned the act of 1873 did not have the slightest effect
upon them. But, on the other hand, the act of 1853, to which the
Senator from Nevada did not seem to allude except in quoting the
report of Mr. Hunter, did adopt the system of what is called a sub-
sidiary coinage of silver; that is, it made the coinage of silver subsid-
iary to gold. It provided for a gold coinage, and made the silver coin-
age of fifty-cent pieces, twenty-five-cent pieces, ten-cent pieces, &c.,
called subsidiary coins, and demonetized those by reducing them to
about 6 per cent, below the legal relative value of sixteen to one; and
7i6 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
if there is any law to complain of on the statute-books of the United
States, it is the law of 1853, in that respect. . . .
. . . The act of 1873 did not affect it in the slightest degree, and
therefore the comments made by the Senator from Nevada rest on an
error in that particular. The essential quahties of the act of 1873
are precisely like the act of 1853. It provided for subsidiary coins.
The substance of the act of 1853 was to provide for a subsidiary coin-
age of silver. But there is another thing to be remembered. The
right to coin the silver dollar, which is now proposed to be authorized
again, has always existed in this country, has never been taken away.
It is the legal dollar to-day, and the silver dollars that are now out-
standing, if there are any, and I suppose there are not many, are a
legal tender for all amounts unless the quality of legal tender has been
taken away by these Revised Statutes.
The act of 1873 is before me. As I said, it is one of the most care-
fully prepared statutes that ever were passed in any country in the
world. It underwent the scrutiny of persons here and abroad; and
for four sessions of Congress was it here and discussed. That act
simply leaves the old dollar where the law of 1853 left it. It says
nothing about it. It says that no coins but these named shall be issued
under the act; but the old silver dollar stood precisely as it stood
before under the act of 1853. It was true it had not been issued since
1853; and I suppose not for some years before that, though I do not
know. . . .
I have been often asked not only in this Chamber but outside, how
comes it that the silver dollar was dropped from among the coins of the
country. The answer is that in 1873, when these statutes were so care-
fully revised, the silver dollar as provided in the then existing law
was worth more than a dollar in gold, more in the money markets of
the world. There was no use then in issuing the dollar, because it '
would go into the melting-pot, being worth more than the gold dollar.
That was the reason why the silver dollar was not provided for. That
was before the movements which have been commented upon in
Europe, and especially in Germany, commenced to affect the price
of silver. The United States had since the act of 1837 undervalued
silver; that is, they required sixteen ounces of silver to be equal to one
ounce of gold. The result was that a dollar in silver was worth more
than a dollar in gold. France and other countries had said that fif-
teen and a half ounces of silver should be equal to an ounce of gold,
and that made a difference of 3 or 4 percent, as between their relation
and ours, which difference was sufficient to induce the exportation of
FINANCIAL HISTORY, MONEY AND BANKING 717
silver in the form of dollars or bullion to France or the countries of
Europe where the double standard prevailed. The result was that .
there was no object in 1873 in providing for the silver dollar. If it had
been issued from the Mint it would not have gone into circulation, but
would have been exported. The idea of reducing it down to the French
standard of fifteen and a half to one was not entertained, as our sub-
sidiary coin which then filled the channels of circulation was actually-
only fourteen and a half to one. There was no object, therefore, in
issuing the silver dollar for the purpose of maintaining the double
standard.
These were the circumstances, and I simply rose now at the heel
of the argument of the honorable Senator from Nevada to correct the
misapprehension into which he has fallen about the act of 1873. The
act of 1873 itself was but a codification of the then existing laws of
the United States, and, with the exception of prohibiting the issue
of the silver dollar, it did not change in the slightest degree the law of
1853, so far as it affected the silver coin. The silver coins now in
circulation were practically provided for by the act of 1853. The
only change made by the act of 1873 was in measuring the weight
of these coins in grams instead of in grains, slightly changing to the
extent of about |- of i per cent, the value of the silver in the silver
coins; and this was done to make them assimilate, dollar for dollar,
grain for grain, weight for weight, size for size, with the French silver
coins now in circulation, so that a five-franc piece is $1, and the
same proportion prevails throughout.
C. Operation of the Bland-Allison Silver Purchase Act, i8y8-i88g ^
By 1878 the agitation for the remonetization of the standard silver dollar
had become strong enough to compel favorable legislation. Accordingly the
first silver purchase act, generally known as the Bland- Allison Act, was passed
by Congress. This act provided for the purchase of silver by the Treasury
Department; and its operation during almost its entire existence was described
in 1889 by the Secretary of the Treasury as follows:
The continued coinage of the silver dollar, at a constantly increas-
ing monthly quota, is a disturbing element in the otherwise excellent
financial condition of the country, and a positive hindrance to any
international agreement looking to the free coinage of both metals at
a fixed ratio.
Mandatory purchases by the Government of stated quantities of
silver, and mandatory coinage of the same into full legal-tender dollars,
1 Treasury Report, 1889 (Washington, 1889), LX-LXI.
7i8 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
are an unprecedented anomaly, and have proved futile, not only in
restoring the value of silver, but even in staying the downward price
of that metal.
Since the passage of the act of February 28, 1878, to November i
1889, there have been purchased 299,889,416.11 standard ounces 01
silver, at a cost of $286,930,633.64, from which there have been coined
343,638,001 standard silver dollars.
There were in circulation on November i of the present year
60,098,480 silver dollars, less than $1 per capita, the remainder, 283,
539,521, being stored away in Government vaults, of which $277,319,-
944 were covered by outstanding certificates.
The price of silver, on March i, 1878, was 54 jg pence, equal to
$1.20429 per ounce fine. At this price $2,000,000 would purchase
1,660,729 ounces of fine silver, which would coin 2,147,205 standard
silver dollars. At the average price of silver for the fiscal year ended
June 30, 1889 (42.499 pence) ^ equivalent to $0.93163 per ounce fine,
$2,000,000 would purchase 2,146,755 fine ounces, out of which
2,775,628 standard silver dollars could be coined.
The lower the price of silver, the greater the quantity that must be
purchased, and the larger the number of silver dollars to be coined,
to comply with the act of February 28, 1878.
No proper effort has been spared by the Treasury Department to
put in circulation the dollars coined under this law. They have been
shipped, upon demand, from the mints and sub-treasuries, free of
charge, to the nearest and the most distant localities in the United
States, only to find their way back into Treasury vaults in payment of
Government dues and taxes. Surely the stock of these dollars which
can perform any useful function as a circulating medium must soon
be reached, if it has not been already, and the further coinage and
storage of them will then become a waste of public money and a
burden upon the Treasury.
It is freely admitted that the predictions of many of our wisest
financiers, as to when the safe limit of silver coinage would be reached,
have not been fulfilled, but it is believed that the principles on which
their apprehensions were based are justified by the laws of trade and
finance, and by the universal experience of mankind. While many
favorable causes have co-operated to postpone the evil effects which are
sure to follow the excessive issue of an overvalued coin, the danger
none the less exists.
The silver dollar has been maintained at par with gold, the mone-
tary unit, mainly by the provisions of law which make it a full legal
FINANCIAL HISTORY, MONEY AND BANKING 719
tender, and its representative, the silver certificate, receivable for
customs and other dues; but the vacuum created by the retirement
of national-bank circulation, and the policy of the Government in not
forcibly paying out silver, but leaving its acceptance largely to the
creditor, have materially aided its free circulation.
The extraordinary growth of this country in population and wealth,
the unprecedented development in all kinds of business, and the un-
swerving confidence of the people in the good faith and financial con-
dition of our Government, have been powerful influences in enabling us
to maintain a depreciated and constantly depreciating dollar at par
with our gold coins, far beyond the limit which was believed possible
a few years ago.
But the fact must not be overlooked that it is only in domestic trade
that this parity has been retained; in foreign trade the silver dollar
possesses only a bullion value.
D. Effect of the Sherman Silver Purchase Act on the Supply of Money,
1893}
In 1890 the Bland- Allison Silver Purchase law was repealed and the so-
called Sherman Silver Purchase law was enacted. Three years later this latter
law was repealed. During its existence the money supply of the country was
materially increased. A view of the increase at this time of its repeal was given
as follows:
. . . This vast increase in the volume of outstanding currency,
notwithstanding the enormous exports of gold during the year, is the
result of several causes, among which may be mentioned the issue of
Treasury notes for the purchase of silver bullion, the excess of public
expenditures over receipts, the additional circulation called for by the
national banks during the late financial stringency, and the large
imports of gold, which amounted during the months of July, August,
September, and October, 1893, to the sum of $55,785,526. That the
amount of money in the country is greater than is required for the
transaction of the business of the people at this time is conclusively
shown by the fact that it has accumulated, and is still accumulating,
in the financial centers to such an extent as to constitute a serious
embarrassment to the banks in which it is deposited, many of which
are holding large sums at a loss. This excessive accumulation of
currency at particular points is caused by the fact that there is no
such demand for it elsewhere as will enable the banks and other in-
stitutions to which it belongs to loan it to the people at remunerative
1 Treasury Report, 1893 (Washington, 1893), LXXIV-LXXVII.
720 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
rates, and it will continue until the business of the country has more
fully recovered from the depressing effects of the recent financial
disturbances. . . .
The unsatisfactory condition of our currency legislation has been
for many years the cause of much discussion and disquietude among
the people, and although one great disturbing element has been re-
moved, there still remain such inconsistencies in the laws and such
differences between the forms and qualities of the various kinds of
currency in use that private business is sometimes obstructed and the
Treasury Department is constantly embarrassed in conducting the
fiscal operations of the Government. There are now in circulation
nine different kinds of currency, all except two being dependent di-
rectly or indirectly upon the credit of the United States. One statute
requires the Secretary of the Treasury to redeem the old legal-tender
notes in coin on presentation, and another compels him to reissue
them, so that, no matter how often they are redeemed, they are never
actually paid and extinguished. The act of July 14, 1890, provides
that the Treasury notes issued in payment for silver bullion shall be
redeemed in gold or silver coin at the discretion of the Secretary, and
when so redeemed may be reissued; but the same act also provides
that no greater or less amount of such notes shall be outstanding at
any time than the cost of the silver bullion and the standard silver
dollars coined therefrom then held in the Treasury purchased by
such notes, and consequently, when these notes are redeemed with
silver coined from the bulHon purchased under the act, they can not
be reissued, but must be retired and canceled, for otherwise there
would be a greater amount of notes outstanding than the cost of the
bullion and coined dollars "then held in the Treasury." In this
manner notes to the amount of $2,625,984 have been retired and can-
celed since August last, and standard silver dollars have taken their
places in the circulation. If redeemed in gold coin, the notes might
be lawfully retired or reissued in the discretion of the Secretary; but
the condition of the Treasury has been, and is now, such that practi-
cally no discretion exists, for the reason that the necessities of the public
service and the requirements of the coin reserve compel him to reissue
them in defraying the expenditures of the Government or in procuring
coin to replenish that fund.
One of the principal difficulties encountered by the Treasury
Department results from the indisposition of the public to retain
standard silver dollars and silver certificates in circulation. It
requires constant effort on the part of the Treasury ofl&cials to pre-
FINANCIAL HISTORY, MONEY AND BANKING 721
vent the certificates especially from accumulating in the subtreasuries
to the exclusion of legal-tender currency. Why this should be the
case is not easily understood, for, although these certificates are not
legal tender in the payment of private debts, they are, by the acts
of 1878 and 1886, made receivable for all pubHc dues, and by the act
of May 12, 1882, national banks are authorized to hold them as part
of their lawful reserves. With the policy of maintaining equaUty
in the exchangeable value of all our currency firmly estabhshed, and
the further accumulation of silver bullion arrested, there is no sub-
stantial reason why the silver certificate should not be as favorably
received and as liberally treated by the public as any other form of
note in circulation; and, for the purpose of creating a greater demand
for their permanent use in the daily transactions of the people, I have
directed that, as far as the law permits, and as rapidly as the oppor-
tunity is afforded, the amount of such certificates of denominations
less than $10 shall be increased by substituting them for larger ones
to be retired, and that. the small denominations of other kinds of cur-
rency shall be retired as they are received into the Treasury and larger
ones substituted in their places.
There are now outstanding United States legal- tender notes to
the amount of $67,944,941 in denominations less than $10; Treasury
notes issued under the act of 1890 of denominations less than $10,
$64,688,489, and national-bank notes, $63,381,916. There is express
authority in the act of August 4, 1886, to substitute small silver
certificates for larger ones, and the Secretary of the Treasury also has
power to make such changes as he may deem proper in the denomina-
tions of the Treasury notes issued under the act of July 14, 1890, but
Congress, in tjie sundry civil appropriation act approved March 3,
1893, provided that no part of the money therein appropriated to
defray the expenses of the Bureau of Engraving and Printing should
be expended for printing United States legal- tender notes of larger
denominations than those retired or canceled. As the law now
specifically designates the denominations in which national-bank
notes shall be issued, they can not be changed without further legis-
lation, and consequently during the present fiscal year, at least, the
, $64,688,489 in small Treasury notes are the only ones that can be
i lawfully retired to enlarge the use of small silver certificates. I am
of the opinion that if this policy can be carried out to the extent of
supplying the country with small silver certificates to an amount
sufficient to conduct the ordinary cash transactions of the people, and
\ if, during the same time, certificates of the largest denominations were
722 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
issued in the places of others retired, so as to encourage the national
banks to hold them as parts of their lawful reserves, the existing diffi
culties would be removed, and ultimately a larger amount of such cur-
rency than is now in circulation could be conveniently and safely used.
The Treasury now holds 140,699,760 fine ounces of silver bullion,
purchased under the act of July 14, 1890, at a cost of $126,758,218,
and which, at the legal ratio of 15.988 to i, would make 181,914,899
silver dollars. The act provided that after the first day of July,
1 89 1, the Secretary of the Treasury should coin as much of the bullion
purchased under it as might be necessary to provide for the redemption
of the notes, and that any gain or seigniorage arising from such coin-
age should be accounted for and paid into the Treasury. It is plain
from this, and other provisions of the act, that so much of the bullion
as may be necessary, when coined, to provide for the redemption of
the entire amount of notes outstanding, is pledged for that purpose,
and can not be lawfully used for any other; but it was decided by the
late Attorney-General, and by my predecessor in office, that the se-
called gain or seigniorage resulting from the coinage as it progressed
constituted a part of the general assets of the Treasury, and that cer-
tificates could be legally issued upon it, notwithstanding the act of
1890 is silent upon the latter subject.
The coinage of the whole amount of this bullion, which would
employ our mints, with their present capacities, for a period of about
five years, would, at the existing ratio, increase the silver circulation
during the time named $55,156,681 from seigniorage, besides such
additions as might be made in the meantime by the redemption of
Treasury notes in standard silver dollars. In order that the Depart-
ment might be in a condition to comply promptly with any increased
demand that may be made upon it by the public for standard silver
dollars or silver certificates, or that it might take advantage of any
favorable opportunity that may occur to put an additional amount
of such currency in circulation without unduly disturbing the mone-
tary situation, I have caused a large amount of bullion to be prepared
for coinage at New Orleans and San Francisco, and have ordered the
mints at those places to be kept in readiness to commence operations
at any time when required.
E. A Plea for the Free Coinage of Silver, i8g6 *
When the Democrats met in their National Nominating Convention at Chicago
in 1896, it was generally ex[)ected that a bitter contest would arise over the free
* Contemporary Newspapers, July 8 and 9, 1896.
FINANCIAL HISTORY, MONEY AND BANKING 723
silver question. Delegates from the west and the south were united in
demanding the remonetization of silver, while the bulk of the opposition came
from the eastern states. The logical presidential candidate of the free silver
men was Richard P. (Silver Dick) Bland of Missouri, for he had been their
spokesman for years, and but for an unexpected occurrence he would in all
probabiUty have been selected by them as their standard bearer. As it turned
out, however, a new champion of the free silver cause arose to displace him.
William Jennings Bryan, in a stirring speech, in which he declared the in-
industrial evils, through which the country was then going, to have been caused
by the single gold standard, stated the cause of the free silver men so eloquently
that they named him as their candidate for president. Important portions of
this speech follow:
Never before in the history of this country has there been wit-
nessed such a contest as that through which we have just passed.
Never before in the history of American politics has a great issue been
fought out as this issue has been, by the voters of a great party. On
the fourth of March, 1895, a few Democrats, most of them members
of Congress, issued an address to the Democrats of the nation, assert-
ing that the money question was the paramount issue of the hour;
declaring that a majority of- the Democratic party had the right to
control the action of the party on this paramount issue; and conclud-
ing with the request that the believers in the free coinage of silver in
the Democratic party should organize, take charge of, and control the
policy of the Democratic party. Three months later, at Memphis,
an organization was perfected, and the silver Democrats went forth
openly and courageously proclaiming their belief, and declaring that,
if successful, they would crystallize into a platform the declaration
which they had made. Then began the conflict. With a zeal
approaching the zeal which inspired the crusaders who followed Peter
the Hermit, our silver Democrats went forth from victory unto
victory until they are now assembled, not to discuss, not to debate,
but to enter up the judgment already rendered by the plain people
of this country. In this contest brother has been arrayed against
brother, father against son. The warmest ties of love, acquaintance
and association have been disregarded; old leaders have been cast
aside when they refused to give expression to the sentiments of those
whom they would lead, and new leaders have sprung up to give direc-
tion to this cause of truth. Thus has the contest been waged, and we
have assembled here under as binding and solemn instructions as were
ever imposed upon representatives of the people. . . .
And now, my friends, let me come to the paramount issue. If
they ask us why it is that we say more on the money question
than we say upon the tariff question, I reply that, if protection
724 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
has slain its thousands, the gold standard has slain its tens of
thousands. If they ask us why we do not embody in our platform
all the things that we believe in, we reply that when we have
restored the money of the Constitution all other necessary reforms
will be possible; but that until this is done there is no other reform
that can be accomplished.
Why is it that within three months such a change has come over
the country? Three months ago, when it was confidently asserted
that those who believe in the gold standard would frame our platform
and nominate our candidates, even the advocates of the gold standard
did not think that we could elect a President. And they had good
reason for their doubt, because there is scarcely a State here to-day
asking for the gold standard which is not in the absolute control of
the Republican party. . . .
You come to us and tell us that the great cities are in favor of the
gold standard; we reply that the great cities rest upon our broad and
fertile prairies. Burn down your cities and leave our farms, and your
cities will spring up again as if by magic; but destroy our farms and
the grass will grow in the streets of every city in the country.
My friends, we declare that this nation is able to legislate for its
own people on every question, without waiting for the aid or consent
of any other nation on earth; and upon that issue we expect to carry
every State in the Union. I shall not slander the inhabitants of the
fair State of Massachusetts nor the inhabitants of the State of New
York by saying that, when they are confronted with the proposition,
they will declare that this nation is not able to attend to its own busi-
ness. It is the issue of 1776 over again. Our ancestors, when but
three millions in number, had the courage to declare their political
independence of every other nation; shall we, their descendants,
when we have grown to seventy millions, declare that we are less inde-
pendent than our forefathers? No, my friends, that will never be the
verdict of our people. Therefore, we care not upon what lines the
battle is fought. If they say bimetallism is good, but that we cannot
have it until other nations help us, we reply that, instead of having
a gold standard because England has, we will restore bimetallism, and
then let England have bimetallism because the United States has it.
If they dare to come out in the open field and defend the gold standard
as a good thing, we will fight them to the uttermost. Having behind
us the producing masses of this nation and the world, supported by
the commercial interests, the laboring interests, and the toilers every-
where, we will answer their demand for a gold standard by saying to
FINANCIAL HISTORY, MONEY AND BANKING 725
them: You shall not press down upon the brow of labor this crown
of thorns, you shall not crucify mankind upon a cross of gold.
V. The Monetary Stock
A. The Trade Dollar, 1873-1878 ^
The coinage act of 1873, which had omitted any mention of the standard
silver dollar, provided for coining a trade dollar of 420 grains to be circulated
in the Orient. The extent to which it was used and the manner of speculating
in it were set forth in a leading financial journal as follows:
To what extent the trade dollar has been used in a speculative
way — buying it, approximately, by weight, and replacing it in cir-
culation by tale — there are no means of knowing. Its circulation,
as will be apparent to everybody who takes note of his own experience,
has been large since the decline in silver, about 18 months ago, per-
mitted it; on the other hand, although over 11 miUions of the new
"standard" dollars have been coined since last February — while
but 8 millions of the ''dollar of our fathers" were coined, from 1793
to 1873 — only a little more than one million of them have as yet been
got into circulation and their appearance in retail trade is not at all
common. The Government is entirely free from fault as regards the
trade dollar, for it will be noticed that its action was simply this:
to convert, into trade dollars, for its owners, any silver bullion pre-
sented, at actual cost, leaving the parties receiving them to dispose of
them as they could; Government neither received them nor paid
them out, simply stamping and returning them. By the same abused
act of 1873, which "demonetized" the old 41 2 J grain dollar by omit-
ting it from the list of coins, the trade dollar was both authorized and
was made legal tender; but no wrong was done by this, because it
was then worth more than 100 cents and the subsequent decline of
silver was not foreseen. The law contemplated the exclusive use of
the coin in export trade; at least once before the present time, upon
its appearing that the supply exceeded the demand for that purpose,
the coinage was suspended. Obviously, Government had no power
to control the course of the coin, and in abrogating its legal-tender
quality as soon as another use for it was opened, and now in suspending
its coinage, has done all which could be demanded.
Still, the question remains, what is to be done with the trade dollars,
which are now at a discount and are liable to become a nuisance.
Commercial aiid Financial Chronicle (New York, 1878), XXVII, 187.
726 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
Some urge that Government is legally bound to redeem, at their face,
all dollars coined before July 22, 1876. There were coined, in 1874,
$3,588,900; in 1875, $5,697,500; in 1876, $6,132,050; in 1877, $9,162,-
900; and if the statement in a Washington dispatch is correct that the
total is $35,959,360, there must have been $11,378,010 coined during
the fiscal year just ended. The rate of coinage increased yearly;
the early coinage, of course, went to the East, and it is impossible to
ascertain how much of the total is within the country, although
it is probable that the bulk of it is of issues since the resolution of
1876, about two-thirds of the whole having probably been put out
since then. It is also urged, and with some reason, it appears to us,
that, as a matter of equity, Government ought to take them all at
par, or at least to exchange them for the standard dollar, piece for
piece; this latter course will probably be proposed to Congress next
winter, unless the price of silver changes in the interim, and it
is the one which, under the circumstances, ought to be adopted,
for the sake of innocent holders who have taken these coins as
"dollars," knowing only that they bear the Government stamp,
which, by the theory of these days, is held to be potent to "make"
anything a good dollar on which it is imprinted. As it will be im-
practicable to distinguish between holders, the speculative one
would have to be allowed to make his profit, for the sake of protect-
ing the innocent one.
To receive the trade dollar for the standard one, at Government
offices, will end the trouble; but how could clearer and more public
testimony be given to show the unnecessary muddle into which the
folly of Congress has brought the coinage? In retiring the trade
dollar the Government will "father" a dollar which it never issued,
legally speaking, and never intended for circulation. Government
will also give the less for the greater, although the difference will be
less than exists under the present arrangement for buying bullion;
speaking approximately. Government will then give an 88-cent in
exchange for a 90-cent dollar, piece for piece, whereas now it only
offers to pay 90 cents for the latter, in 88-cent dollars. . . .
B. Kinds and Amounts of Money in Circulation, i86o-i8qj ^
At the outbreak of the Civil War but two kinds of money circulated in the
United States, namely, specie and slate bank note. From time lo lime additions
were made to the money slock Ijolh in amounts and kinds. Conditions for t\ picil
yean were as follows:
> Treasury Report, 1893 (Washington, 1893), CVIII, CXI, CXII, CXV.
FINANCIAL HISTORY, MONEY AND BANKING 727
July I, i860
(Population, 31,443,321; circulation per capita, $13.85)
General stock
oined c
issued
coined or In Treasury . , .
: J circulation
Specie $235,000,000 $6,695,225 $228,304,775
State-bank notes 207,102,477 207,102,477
$422,102,477 $6,695,225 $435,407,252
July I, 1862
(Population, 32,704,000; circulation per capita, $10.23)
State-bank notes $183,792,079 $183,792,079
United States notes 96,620,000 $23,754,335 72,865,665
Demand notes 53,040,000 53,040,000
$333,452,079 $23,754,335 $309,697,744
Add: Specie in circulation on the Pacific coast 25,000,000
$334,697,744
July I, 1863
(Population, 33,365,000; circulation per capita, $17.84)
Fractional currency $20,192,456 $4,308,074 $15,884,382
State-banknotes 238,677,218 238,677,218
United States notes 387,646,589 75,165,171 312,481,418
Demand notes 3,351,020 3,351,020
$649,867,283 $79,473,245 $570,394,038
Add: Specie in circulation on the Pacific coast 25,000,000
$595,394,038
July I, 1864
(Population, 34,046,000; circulation per capita, $19.67)
Fractional currency $22,894,877 $3,762,376 $19,132,501
State-banknotes I79,i57,7i7 I79,i57,7i7
United States notes 447,300,203 32,184,213 415,115,990
National-banks note 31,235,270 31,235,270
$680,588,067 $35,946,589 $644,641,478
Add: Specie in circulation on the Pacific coast 25,000,000
$669,641,478
728 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
July I, 1878
(Population, 47,598,000; circulation per capita, $15.32)
General stock .
coined or In Treasury Amount in
issued "''•"^^^^""
Standard silver dollars, includ-
ing bullion in Treasury. . . $16,269,079 $15,059,828 $1,209,251
Subsidiary silver 60,778,828 6,860,506 53,918,322
Silver certificates. . . ; 1,462,600 1,455,520 7, 080
Fractional currency 16,547,769 180,044 16,367,725
United States notes 346,681,016 25,775,121 320,905,895
National-banknotes 324,514,284 12,789,923 311,724,361
$766,253,576 $62,120,942 $704,132,634
Add: Specie in circulation on the Pacific coast 25,000,000
$729>i32>634
July I, 1879
(Population, 48,866,000; circulation per capita, $16.75)
Gold coin, including bullion in
Treasury $245,741,837 $135,236,475 $110,505,362
Standard silver dollars, includ-
ing bullion in Treasury. . . 41,276,356 33,239,9^7 8,036,439
Subsidiary silver 70,249,985 8,903,401 , 61,346,584
Gold certificates 15,413,700 133,880 15,279,820
Silver certificates 2,466,950 2,052,470 414,480
United States notes 346,681,016 45,036,904 301,644,112
National-banknotes 329,691,697 8,286,701 321,404,996
$1,051,521,541 $232,889,748 $818,631,793
July I, 1893
(Population, 66,946,000; circulation per capita, $23.85)
Gold coin including bullion in
Treasury $597,697,685 $189,162,022 $408,535,663
Standard silver dollars, includ-
ing bullion in Treasury. . . 538,300,776 481,371,103 56,929,673
Subsidiary silver 77,415,123 11,945,257 65,469,866
Gold certificates 94,041,189 1,399,000 92,642,189
Silver certificates 330,957,S04 4,133,656 326,823,848
Treasury notes, act July 14.
1890 147,190,227 6,334,613 140,855,614
United States notes 346,681,016 27,621,590 319,059,426
Currency certificates, act June
8,1872 12,405,000 690,000 11,715,000
National-bank notes 178,713,87a 4,043,906 174,669,966
Total $2,323,402,392 $726,701,147 $1,596,701,245
FINANCIAL HISTORY, MONEY AND BANKING 729
VI. Panics and Crises
A. The Panic of i8yj ^
During the past hundred years the United States has suffered severely from
several panics and crises. The first came in 18 19. Others followed more or less
periodically in 1837, 1857, 1873, 1884, 1893 and 1907. Of these one of the most
severe occurred in 1873. A detailed description of conditions follows:
The monetary crisis of 1873 may be said to have had its beginning
in New York City on September 8, by the failure of the Warehouse
Security Company, and of two houses which had left their regular
business to embark in enterprises foreign thereto, which were followed
on the 13th by the failure of a large firm of stock-brokers. On the
1 8th and 19th two of the largest banking-houses in the city, well
known throughout the country, and which were interested in the nego-
tiations of large amounts of railroad securities, also failed; and on
the 20th of the same month the failures of the Union Trust Company,
the National Trust Company, the National Bank of the Common-
wealth, and three other well-known banking-houses were announced.
On the same day the New York Stock Exchange, for the first time in
its existence, closed its doors, and they were not again opened for a
period of ten days, during which period legal-tender notes commanded
a premium over certified checks of from one-fourth of one per cent,
to three per cent. An active demand for deposits commenced on the
1 8th, and increased rapidly during the 19th and 20th, chiefly from the
country correspondents of the banks; and their drafts continued
to such an extent, "calling back their deposits in a medium never
before received," that the reserves of the banks were alarmingly
reduced.
The "call loans," amounting to more than sixty millions of dollars,
upon which the banks relied to place themselves in funds in such an
emergency, were entirely unavailable, because the means of the bor-
rowers, upon the realization of which they depended to repay their
loans were, to a great extent, pledged with the banks. These col-
laterals could in ordinary times have been sold, but at that moment
no market could be found except at ruinous sacrifices. Had there
been a market, the payments would have been made in checks
upon the associated banks, which would not have added to the
general supply of cash. A meeting of the clearing house association
was called, and on Saturday evening, September 20, the following
1 Treasury Report, 18/^ (Washington, 1873), 90-2.
73© READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
plan for facilitating the settlement of balances at the clearing-house
was unanimously adopted:
In order to enable the banks of this association to afford such additional assist-
ance to the business community, and also for the purpose of facilitating the settle-
ment of the exchanges between the banks, it is proposed that any bank in the
clearing-house association, may, at its option, deposit with a committee of five
persons, to be appointed for that purpose, an amount of its bills receivable, or other
securities to be approved by said committee, who shall be authorized to issue there-
for to said depositing bank certificates of deposit, bearing interest at seven per cent,
per annum, in denominations of five and ten thousand dollars, such as may be de-
sired, to an amount not in excess of seventy-five per cent, of the securities or bills
receivable so deposited.
Except when the securities deposited shall consist of either United States stocks
or gold certificates, the certificates of deposit may be issued upon the par value of
such securities.
These certificates may be used in settlement of balances at the clearing-house
for a period not to extend beyond the first of November proximo, and they shall be
received by creditor banks during that period daily, in the same proportion as they
bear to the aggregate amount of the debtor balances paid at the clearing-house.
The interest which may accrue upon these certificates shall, on the ist day of
November next, or sooner, should the certificates all be redeemed, be apportioned
among the banks which shall have held them during that time.
The securities deposited with the committee, as above named, shall be held
by them as a special deposit, pledged for the redemption of the certificates
issued thereon.
The committee shall be authorized to exchange any portion of said securities
for an equal amount of others, to be approved by them, at the request of the depos-
iting bank, and shall have power to demand additional security, either by an ex-
change or an increased amount, at their discretion.
The amount of certificates which this committee may issue as above shall not
exceed ten million dollars.
This arrangement shall be binding upon the clearing-house association when
assented to by three-fourths of its members.
The banks shall report to the manager of the clearing-house every morning at
lo o'clock the amount of such certificates held by them.
That, in order to accomplish the purposes set forth in this arrangement, the
legal tenders belonging to the associated banks shall be considered and treated as
a common fund, held for mutual aid and protection, and the committee appointed
shall have power to equalize the same by assessment, or otherwise, at their dis-
cretion.
For this purpose a statement shall be made to the committee of the condition
of each bank on the morning of every day, before the commencement of business,
which shall be sent with the exchanges to the manager of the clearing-house,
specifying the following items:
I St. Amount of loans and discounts.
ad. Amount of loan certificates.
3d. Amount of United States certificates of deposit and legal-tender notes.
4th, Amount of deposits, deducting therefrom the amount of special gold
deposits.
FINANCIAL HISTORY, MONEY AND BANKING 731
The suspension of currency payments followed and was at first
confined to the banks of New York City, but afterward extended to
other large cities because the New York banks could not respond to
the demands of their correspondents in those cities, and these in
turn, could not respond to the demands of their correspondents.
Exchange on New York, which would otherwise have commanded a
slight premium, was at a discount, and to a considerable extent un-
available. The suspension of the banks in other leading cities, almost
without exception, therefore followed, and their partial or entire sus-
pension continued for forty days, until confidence was in a measure
restored by the resumption of the New York City banks on the first
day of November.
Although predictions had been made of the approach of a financial
crisis, there were no apprehensions of its immediate occurrence. On
the contrary there were in almost every direction evidences of pros-
perity. The harvest was nearly or quite completed, and the bins and
granaries were full to overflowing. The manufacturing and mining
interests had also been prosperous during the year, and there was
good promise that the fall trade, which had opened, would be as large
as during previous years. The value of the cereals, potatoes, tobacco,
and hay for 1872, is estimated by the Department of Agriculture at
$1,324,385,000. It is supposed that the value of these products for
the present year, a large portion of which was at this time ready for
sale and awaiting shipment to market, will not vary materially from
the above-mentioned estimate of last year. An estimate based upon
the census returns of 1869 gives the probable aggregate value of the
marketable products of industry for that year at $4,036,000,000,
and a similar estimate upon the same basis, and upon returns to the
Agricultural Department, gives an increase of $1,788,000,000 for 1873
over the amount for 1868.
It is not the province of the Comptroller to explain the causes which
led to this suspension. In order to enter upon such an explanation
it would be necessary to obtain comparative data for a series of years
in reference to the imports and exports, the products of industry,
the issue of currency and other evidences of debt, and, in fact, a gen-
eral discussion of the political economy of the country. The imme-
diate cause of the crisis is, however, more apparent. The money
market had become overloaded with debt, the cost of railroad con-
struction for five years past being estimated to have been $1,700,000,-
000, or about $340,000,000 annually; while debt based upon almost
every species of property — State, city, town, manufacturing cor-
732 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
porations, and mining companies — had been sold in the market.
Such bonds and stocks had been disposed of to a considerable extent
in foreign markets, and so long as this continued the sale of similar
securities was stimulated, and additional amounts offered. When
the sale of such securities could no longer be effected abroad, the bonds
of railroads and other enterprises of like nature which were in process
of construction were thus forced upon the home market, until their
negotiation became almost impossible. The bankers of the city of
New York, who were burdened with the load, could not respond to
the demands of their creditors, the numerous holders of similar securi-
ties became alarmed, and the panic soon extended throughout the
country.
B. The Financial Crisis of 1884 ^
In 1884 occurred a financial crisis, caused, as is generally believed, by an over-
investment in railroad building. The Comptroller of the Currency reported on
the situation at the time as follows:
Owing to the large number of mercantile failures which had
occurred during 1883, considerable financial uneasiness was felt at the
beginning of 1884, and the year opened inauspiciously, by the appoint-
ment on January i of a receiver for the New York and New England
Railroad. Following closely upon this failure were the troubles of
the Oregon and Transcontinental Company, and the appointment on
January 1 2 of a receiver for the North River Construction Company.
The months of February, March, and April were characterized by
many commercial failures, rumors affecting the credit of various cor-
j>orations, and a still further depreciation in price of stocks and bonds,
and in fact of all products and commodities.
This feeling of uneasiness and of uncertainty as to value culminated
on May 6 with the failure of the Marine National Bank of New
York whose president was a member of the firm of Grant & Ward.
The failure of this firm immediately followed, and owing to the promi-
nence of some of its members and its large liabilities, exceeding
$17,000,000, its failure caused great excitement, that had not subsided
when on May 13 the president of the Second National bank of New
York was discovered to be a defaulter to the extent of $3,185,000.
Although this defalcation was immediately made good by the directors
of the bank and did not result in its suspension or failure, such a
shock was given to credit, and the confidence of the public in all
institutions and firms supp)osed to have loaned money upon such rail-
' Report of the Comptroller of the Currency, 1884 (Washington, 1884), 32-5.
FINANCIAL HISTORY, MONEY AND BANKING 733
road and other securities as had greatly decreased in value or whose
managers were supposed to be directly or indirectly interested in
Speculation in Wall Street, was so shaken, that there was great pressure
to sell stocks and securities and an active demand on the banks for
deposits. . . .
The crisis of May, 1884, seems to have been even more unexpected
to the country than that of September, 1873. Although many con-
servative people had predicted that the large increase in railroad and
other securities, and the general inflation which had been going on
for a number of years would bring financial troubles and disasters
to the country, it was nevertheless generally beUeved that the depre-
ciation of values and the liquidation which had already been going
on for many months, and the further facts that the country was doing
business upon a gold basis, that the prices of all commodities were
already very low, that an increased area of territory was under cultiva-
tion, and that the prospects were excellent for good crops, together
with the larger distribution of wealth throughout the Union, would
prevent a repetition of the panic of 1873. This general belief was
measurably correct, as the panic or crisis was confined principally
to New York City, although its effects were more or less felt in all
parts of the country, and the liquidation resulting therefrom has not
yet been fully completed.
The most profound students of political economy have for many
years endeavored to explain the causes which have led to financial
troubles similar to those of 1857, 1873, and 1884, and it is not to be
expected that the Comptroller can obtain sufiicient data to enter into
a complete and satisfactory explanation of the causes of the financial
disturbances of the present year. The causes that lead to financial
crises in a country so rich in agriculture, of which the manufacturing
and mining interests are so varied and important, the imports and
exports so great, of so extensive an area of territory, and in which
wealth is becoming so equally distributed, and the population of which
is increasing so rapidly, are difficult to explain, and the issue of cur-
rency and creation of debt require elaborate study to ascertain the
reasons for the rise and fall in value of commodities and realty which
cause a panic. It is scarcely possible at this time to explain why it
should be necessary for the country to go through thje liquidation and
financial trouble which is now being experienced.
It is apparent, however, that a repetition of some of the same
circumstances which brought about the monetary crisis of 1873 has
been largely influential in causing the present crisis. Property of all
734
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
kinds had been capitalized, as it is called; bonds and stocks had been
issued for the purpose of building railroads, carrying on manufactur-
ing and other business; municipal and other bonds had been issued
for public improvements. These bonds and stocks were put upon
the market, and commercial credit was extended until a point was
reached where capitalists of this and other countries questioned thi
intrinsic value of these securities and the earning power of the proper t\
on which they were based, and also doubted the solvency of man\
firms in commercial business. This lack of confidence induced them
to decline to make farther advances or investments. A decrease in
the earnings of railroads, manufacturing, and other enterprises fol-
lowed, and the entire business of the country has consequently been
restricted and deadened.
There is little doubt that one of the causes which led to the local
disturbances among the banks, national and State, and private bankers
of the city of New York, was their intimate relation in many instances
to the New York Stock Exchange, and the fact that a large portion of
the loans made by the banks and bankers of New York were based
upon the security of stocks and bonds, often speculative in their
character, which are dealt in and regularly called at the Stock
Board. ...
Just what restrictions should be placed upon the business of the
New York Stock Exchange, or what legislation should be had, is
difficult to determine. Just how far the Federal or State law can
interfere with the business of private citizens is a delicate and difficult
matter to settle.
C. The Panic of 1907 ^
The Panic of 1907, which is often referred to as the "rich man's panic," was
severe while it lasted. Yet it is generally believed that it would have been still
more severe had the financial interests of the country not combined for protection.
Thus in New York, for example, the leading banks, through the medium of the
clearing house association, issued an emergency currency, designated as clearing
house certificates. A view of the panic by the Comptroller of the Currency
follows:
Certainly since as long ago as the date of the San Francisco catas-
trophe there has been no lack of warning indications of financial
troubles and possible business disaster. For at least ten or twelve
years there has been an era of advancing prices and great industrial.
commercial, and speculative activity in all the countries of the world.
» Report of the Comptroller of the Currency, 1907 (Washington, 1907), 69-71.
FINANCIAL HISTORY, MONEY AND BANKING 735
Credits have increased and multiplied until the hmit has been reached •
in the amount of reserve money on which they must be based.
For at least two or three years, however, it has been becoming
more and more evident that there must soon be a slackening of pace
if we were to avoid a general and universal crisis in financial and com-
mercial affairs. These conditions have been world-wide and not by
any means confined to the United States. Crises of more or less
severity have arisen in several important countries. As is always
the case when there is a demand for Hquidation, it first manifested
itself in the stock market. For months there has been a more or less
steady decline in stock-market quotations. Not only stocks, but the
very best bonds, have dropped lower and lower in price. The diffi-
culty in selling bonds has become so great that for several years many
of the railways have had to raise money for their necessary expendi-
tures and improvements with so-called short time notes, instead of
regular bond issues, the rates of interest on such issues rising higher
and higher and each issue being harder to place. Merchants and
manufacturers of the highest standing and credit have found it more
and more difficult to secure or renew loans and the rates have risen
steadily for months past.
With such conditions existing we approached the autumn crop-
moving period, when there is always more or less disturbance of credit
on account of currency shipments and withdrawals of balances from
the reserve cities. For a time it seemed as if there were good reason
to hope that there might be no more than a gradual liquidation which
might be conducted in detail, one interest or line at a time, beginning
with the stock market, and that while there might be a general de-
cline in the volume of trade and the gradual liquidation of credits,
it would not develop into a bank or commercial crisis. But during
the month of October the collapse of a highly speculative corner in •
stocks, dealt in on the "curb" in New York — not even listed on any
regular exchange — brought suspicion upon an old, well-established
national bank in the city of New York. Although examinations
by the national-bank examiners and the New York clearing house
committee showed this bank to be entirely solvent, with its large capi-
tal and a considerable surplus still beyond question intact, public
interest had been aroused to such an extent that runs developed in •
New York City on a number of other banks and trust companies and
some national banks between which and the bank first under attack
there was known to be community of ownership and management.
The national banks of New York City were all found to be solvent
736 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
by the clearing house committee, and being supported by the clearin
house banks none failed.
But, unfortunately, a few other banks and trust companies wci
not in such good condition, and many of them, not being members u.
the clearing house or any similar association, they were not so well
prepared for cooperation and support of each other. The Knicker-
bocker Trust Company, with $1,200,000 of capital and $48,387,000
of deposits, closed its doors on October 22, and this was followed by
a large number of failures among smaller banks and trust companies.
During the months of October and November ten State banks and
trust companies, two of which have since resumed, closed their doors
in New York City and vicinity. There were long and serious runs on
two large trust companies, which were only kept from failure by the
support of the other trust companies and the clearing-house banks.
One national bank, the First National Bank of Brooklyn, which was
clearing-house agent for two large trust companies in Brooklyn
which had failed, was compelled to close its doors on October 25 in
order to avoid the responsibility for the clearings of these trust com-
panies, and is now in the hands of a receiver.
On October 26 the New York clearing-house banks decided to issue
clearing-house certificates for use in the payment of balances, and to
limit, if not suspend, the shipment of currency to out-of-town banks.
In this the New York banks were followed by those of the other cen-
tral reserve and most of the reserve cities. The result was to at once
precipitate a most serious bank crisis and a famine of currency for
pay rolls and other necessary cash transactions. All domestic ex-
changes were at once thrown into disorder and the means of remit-
tance and collection were almost entirely suspended. Money has been
withdrawn and hoarded by individuals, corporations, and even more,
perhaps, by the banks themselves, all of whom at once drew and held
all the money of any kind they could obtain, often really in larger
sums than needed.
It has been one of the peculiar features of the situation that there
has actually been more of a panic among the banks themselves than
there has been among the people. The banks have been fearful as
to what might develop, and finding their usual reserve deposits only
partially available, if available at all, they have been compelled in
self-protection to gather from every source all the money they could
possibly reach and to hold on to it by refusing imymcnt wherever
it is possible and satisfying their customers with the smallest possible
amount of cash. It has been remarkable how patiently and with
FINANCIAL HISTORY, MONEY AND BANKING 737
what forbearance the people in the business community generally
have borne with the situation and helped the banks to deal with the
emergency. With the exception of the first excitement in New York
and some smaller runs in other places, there has really been surprisingly
little excitement or uneasiness among the people.
The greatest hardship to business generally has been the derange-
ment of the machinery for making collections and remittances. As
can readily be seen, this has interfered with every kind and class of
business and led to great curtailment of business operations of every
kind. Factories have suspended, workmen have been thrown out
of employment, orders have been canceled, the moving of crops has
been greatly retarded and interfered with and exports have fallen off
at a time of the year when they should be at their highest. Another
result has been a reduction of the volume of the foreign credits avail-
able just at the time they are most needed to offset the large imports
of gold which have been made.
1 ^?
CHAPTER XXI
MANUFACTURES, TARIFF, AND TRUSTS, 1860-1915
I. Manufactures
A. Conditions of Industrial Progress, igoi
The fundamental conditions of the industrial progress of a country are here
excellently stated by the Industrial Commission. This commission was created by
act of Congress in 1898 for the purpose of investigating general industrial condi-
tions. For two years they took testimony and made investigations and in 1900-
1902 published their report in nineteen volumes. This constitutes one of our most
complete and authentic records of recent industrial developments.
The increase in the manufactures and commerce of the United
States during the past half century has been enormous. It is charac-
teristic of progress in civilization, with the usual greater aggregate
productive power on the part of the people which accompanies it,
that manufactures, transportation, and trade should increase in
greater proportion than agriculture and mining. The amount of
food and other raw material required increases, for the most part, but
little more rapidly than the population. If the productive power
of the people, therefore, increases by a much higher ratio, labor is
set free from the task of producing the raw materials, the absolute ne-
cessities of life, and may devote itself to elaborating materials so that
they shall supply higher needs and appeal to more developed tastes.
The employments of the world thus become more and more diversified.
Because of the wonderful improvements in means of production, the
same amount of labor can accomplish vastly more than it could fifty
or one hundred years ago. A great variety of new products and new
services, unknown to the past generations, has been introduced, and
the people generally are able to enjoy products formerly accessible
to the few only; and the quality of goods, even those consumed by the
poorer classes, has risen greatly. . . .
Probably in no other country has the progress of the industrial
system been so rapid as in the United States. A study of our economic
' Pinal Report of the Industrial Commission. (Washington, 1902), XIX, 485,
515.518.
MANUFACTURES, TARIFF, AND TRUSTS 739
history shows that the introduction and improvement of machinery,
and the progress in methods of industrial organization and adminis-
tration, have resulted in making the individual more productive,
and worth more per unit of his time; that he has therefore received
continually a greater compensation; that his increased income has
given him increased purchasing power, and that this gain in purchasing
power has so increased the demand for manufactured articles as
much more than to counterbalance the original displacement of labor
by these improvements. . . .
The fundamental elements of efficiency in industrial production,
in the United States as in any country, are perhaps summed up as —
1 . The character of the people, as given form by race, environment,
and especially by social and political influences.
2. The physical condition of the people, as determined by their
food, their habits of life, and exercise.
3. The skill and efficiency of the people as tool users.
4. The quantity and productivity of tools, as determined by
design and construction, and by combination of the man and the ma-
chine under all the preceding conditions.
5. The effective organization of business for economizing all pro-
ductive and distributive forces.
Given a people of constitutional vigor and intelligence, with
a talent for invention and construction, with political freedom and
without social caste control, with a good system of education of mind
and of hand, with abundance of wholesome food and a working day
of proper length, with vocation and general opportunity free to all,
and they will soon acquire tools and machinery, and skill in their
use, and will promptly attain ability to promote their own elevation
in maximum degree in minimum time. These conditions are probably
at the moment illustrated in larger measure in the industrial system
of the United States than in any other nation, though progress toward
their fulfilment is rapid over all the civiHzed world. ...
B. Growth of Manufactures, 1850-1880^
A striking feature of the following tables is the tremendous leap shown by
our manufacturing industries between i86c and 1870, under the stimulus of war
demand and war prices. Manufactures were highly localized in the north Atlantic
and north central states and were still closely alUed to the extractive industries
of agriculture and mining.
^ Report on the Manufactures of the United States at the Tenth Census. (Wash-
ington, 1883), II, xi-xxi, passim.
740
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
The growth of the United States in manufacturing industry i
one of the most noteworthy features of the present industrial agi
It is not easy to say which is the best test of that growth; but th(
appHcation of any one of the several tests offered by the tables com
mon to the last four censuses shows our national progress in this direc-
tion to have been remarkable.
Let us first take the figures representing the gross value of
product. . . .
It is noted in another place (see introductory notes on the statistics
of manufactures) that in comparisons of 1870 with 1880, on the one
hand, or with i860 on the other, it should be borne in mind that the
figures for 1870 are stated in a currency which was at a great discount
in gold, the average premium on gold being for the twelve months,
June I, 1869, to May 31, 1870, 25.3 per cent., which is closely equiv-
alent to a discount on currency of 20 per cent. If then, we discount
the reported values of 1870 by one-fifth, we shall have as our corrected
table the following:
Year
1850
i86o
1870
1880
Corrected gross
value of
manufactured
products
$1,019,109,616
1,885,861,676
3,385,860,354
5,369.579,191
Corrected
gain
per cent in
ten years
S5.05
79-54
58.59
Again, we may inquire what has been the increase in the net value
of manufactured products reported in the four successive censuses
taken for the purposes of this comparison; that is, the value of the
products after deduction of the value of the materials consumed: . . .
Year
Corrected net
value of
manufactured
products
Corrected
gain
per cent in
ten years
1850. . .
i860..
1870. .
1880
S 463,935,296
854.256,584
1,395,118,560
1.972.755,642
84 13
63 31
4 1 . 40
MANUFACTURES, TARIFF, AND TRUSTS 741
Again, we may take the figures of capital reported as invested in
manufacturing industries at the successive periods under considera-
tion, as affording a certain measure of the growth of the country in
industrial power, although there is too much reason to believe that the
returns of capital have always been gravely defective, for reasons which
will be adverted to hereafter. Assuming, however, that the liability to
omission or defective statement remained of constant force from 1850
to 1880, we should have the following progressive results: . . .
1850
i860
1870
1880
Corrected
amount of
capital invested
in manufactures
$ 533,245,351
1,009,855,715
1,694,567,015
2,790,272,606
Corrected
gain
per cent in
ten years
89.38
67.80
64.66
Again, we may take for comparison the amount of manufacturing
wages paid in each of the years 1850, i860, 1870, and 1880: . . .
Year
Corrected
amount of
manufacturing
wages paid
Corrected
gain
per cent in
ten years
1850
i860
1870
1880
$236,759,464
378,878,966
620,467,474
947,953,795
60.03
63.76
52.78
If, again, we were to take the number of hands employed as the
test of the manufacturing power of the country on the several dates
named, we should have the following table:
Year
185c
i860
1870
1880
Number of
hands employed
958,079
1,311,246
2,053,996
2,732,595
Gain
per cent in
ten years
36.86
56.64
33.04
742
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
. . . The geographical distribution of manufactures throughout
the United States appears by the following tables, as was to be ex-
pected, to be governed by very different forces from those which control
the distribution of population or of agricultural industry. . . .
The following table presents for 1880 the proportions in which
the several geographical groups contribute to the aggregate number
of establishments, amount of capital invested, number of hands
employed, amount of wages paid, and gross and net values of product:
Net
product
Number
Amount
Hands
(i. e., de-
Groups of
of estab-
of capital
em-
Wages
paid
Gross
product
ducting
states
lishments
invested
ployed
value of
mate-
rials)
The United States
100.00
100.00
100.00
100.00
100.00
100.00
North Atlantic. .
44.87
61.94
62.23
64 -33
59 64
62.03
South Atlantic. . .
10.16
5 89
7-59
4-99
526
530
Northern Central.
34-33
25 78
24 -39
24.86
28.94
26.38
Southern Central.
7-55
3-75
3.85
311
3-47
352
Western
309
2.64
1.94
2.71
2.69
2.77
. . . Table II of the general statistical tables following [on page
743] distributes the aggregate of our manufacturing industries under
332 titles; of these the following show each a total production of
$50,000,000 or over:
. . . Some branches of manufacture are reported for every one of
the 47 states and territories; such as blacksmithing, boot and shoe
making, the manufacture of tinware, copperware, of sheet-iron ware,
and saddlery and harness making. The making or repairing of car-
riages and the wheelwrighting trade appear in 46 states and territories.
The making of bread and other bakery products and the manufactiu-e
of furniture are reported from 45 states and territories. Forty-four
states and territories return founderies and machine-shops.
It is significant of the habits of the people that while the pro-
duction of men's clothing in distinct establishments is reported in
43 states and territories, that of women's clothing is reported from
only 25, domestic manufacture or custom dress-making taking the
place of the shop or factory in supj^lying this demand in 22 states or
territories. The other industries which are reported in as many as
43 states and territories are the manufacture of tobacco or cigars and
MANUFACTURES, TARIFF, AND TRUSTS
743
Industry
Flouring and grist-mill products
Slaughtering and meat-packing, not including retail
butchering establishments
Iron and steel
Woolen manufactures, all classes ^
Lumber, sawed
Foundery and machine-shop products
Cotton goods
Clothing, men's
Boots and shoes, including custom work and repairing. .
Sugar and molasses, refined
Leather, tanned
Carpentering
Printing and publishing
Furniture ^
Leather, curried
Agricultural implements
Mixed textiles
Bread and other bakery products
Carriages and wagons
Tobacco, cigars and cigarettes
Paper
Tobacco, chewing, smoking, and snuff,
Number
of estab-
lishments
Value
of
product
$505,185,712
303,562,413
296,557,685
267,252,913
233,268,729
214,378,468
210,950,383
209,548,460
196,920,481
155,484,915
113,348,336
94,152,139
90,789,341
77,845,725
71,351,297
68,640,486
66,221,703
65,824,896
64,951,617
63,979,575
55,109,914
52,793,056
the manufacture of confectionery. The distinct manufacture of
brooms and brushes is reported from 36 states and territories, and that
of mattresses and spring beds from 35. . . .
So much for the wide territorial diffusion of common industries,
many of them of a petty character. ... Of the greater industries,
some are widely spread; others intensely concentrated. The greatest
of all is the flour and grist-mill industry, aggregating a product of
$505,185,712. Of this about one-half is produced by the six states
of New York, Illinois, Pennsylvania, Minnesota, Ohio, and Missouri,
while yet not less than 24 states produce above $4,000,000 each.
This industry involves the consumption of 304,775,737 bushels of
wheat and 234,907,220 bushels of other grain, with an aggregate value
of all materials reaching $441,545,225. . . .
The next of the great industries is also connected with the supply of
1 Includes carpets, other than rag; felt goods; hosiery and knit goods; wool
hats; woolen goods and worsted goods.
2 Includes furniture, chairs.
744 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
food, viz. slaughtering and meat-packing, which yields an aggregate
product of $303,562,413. The concentration of this interest is startlin^^
the single state of Illinois contributing almost one- third of the whole, the
single city of Chicago producing $85,324,371. Of the other states, Ne\\
York follows at a long distance with $43,096,138; Massachusetts, with
$22,951,782; New Jersey, with $20,719,640; Ohio, with $19,231,297;
Indiana, \vith $15,209,204; Missouri, with $14,628,630. . . .
Ranking next in order of gross value of product comes the manu-
facture of iron and steel, with an aggregate of $296,557,685, of which
Pennsylvania alone produces $145,576,268. Ohio is the next state as an
iron producer, with $34,918,360, or less than one-fourth the product of
Pennsylvania. New York, with $22,219,219; Illinois, with $20,545,-
289; New Jersey, with $10,341,896, and Massachusetts, with $10,288,-
921, are the only other states rising above ten millions. There are seven
other states showing a product of between $10,000,000 and $4,000,000,
and six showing between $4,000,000 and $1,000,000. The aggregate
value assigned to the product of the iron and steel manufacture is dis-
tributed among the principal different classes of works as follows:
Blast furnaces $ 89,315,569
Bloomaries and forges 3,968,074
Iron rolling mills 136,798,574
Bessemer and open-hearth steel works 55,805,210
Crucible and miscellaneous steel works 10,670,258
Total 296,557,685
. . . Certain industries, not of the highest yet of very con-
siderable importance as to aggregate value of product, are notice-
able for their rapid extension at the west. These are furniture, with
a product of $77,845,725; agricultural implements, $68,640,486;
carriages and wagons, $64,951,617; distilled liquors, $41,063,663. . . .
C. Manufactures^ 1850-iQio^
The growing industrialization of the United States in the half century since
the Civil War is clearly shown by the marvelous increase in the manufacturing
industries of the country as indicated in the following table.
The statistics of manufactures secured at the decennial censuses
from 1850 to 1900, inclusive, covered the neighborhood, hand, and
building industries, as well as the factory industries, while the reports
for 1904 and 1909 were confined to factory industries. . . .
» Thirteenth Census of the United States, Taken in tlie Year jgio. Volume
VIII: Manufactures (Washington, 1913), 33, 37, 48, 56, 83.
MANUFACTURES, TARIFF, AND TRUSTS
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746 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
. . . The present report on manufactures distinguishes 264 in-
dustries, although for certain purposes some of these are subdivided
into two or more branches. . . .
There are three industries which in 1909 reported a value of prod-
ucts exceeding a billion dollars, namely, the slaughtering and meat-
packing, foundry and machine-shop, and lumber industries. There
are six others whose products exceeded half a billion dollars in value,
namely, the steel works and rolling mills, the flour-mill and gristmill
industry, printing and publishing, and the manufacture of cotton
goods, of men's clothing, and of boots and shoes. . . .
The five leading states in respect to value of manufactured products
in 1909 were New York, Pennsylvania, Illinois, Massachusetts, and
Ohio. These states together contained 33.2 per cent, or about one-
third, of the total population of the United States in 1910, but
reported 51.1 per cent of the total number of wage earners in manu-
facturing industries in 1909, 52.5 per cent of the value of manufac-
tured products, and 53.8 per cent of the value added by manufacture,
or a little more than one-half in each case. . . .
New York decidedly outranks any other city in manufacturing,
although in proportion to its population its manufacturing interests
are relatively less important than in a considerable number of other
cities. Nearly one-tenth of the total value of manufactured products
for the United States in 1909 was reported from New York City. As
judged by the value of products, Chicago ranked second among the
manufacturing cities in 1909, followed by Philadelphia, St. Louis,
Cleveland, Detroit, Pittsburgh, Boston, Buffalo, Milwaukee, and
Newark, in the order named. Each of the 11 cities just named
produced in 1909 manufactured products valued at more than
$200,000,000.
D. Rank of the United States as a Manufacturer of Cottony
1 8 JO- J go j ^
As representative manufacturing industries in this country, the cotton and the
iron and steel industries have been selected for more detailed description, and
the following six extracts trace their development somewhat more fully. The
importance of the textile industry in the United States is best shown by comparing
it with those of other countries. Judged by number of spindles or value of product
the United States ranks second in the manufacture of cotton.
It is comparatively easy to ascertain the relative rank of the coun-
tries in the manufacture of cotton. Two methods may be followed,
» Census of Manufactures: 1905. Textiles, Bulletin 74 (Washington, 1907), 21-2.
MANUFACTURES, TARIFF, AND TRUSTS
747
either of which gives an approximation to the truth — the amount
of cotton consumed, and the number of spinning spindles. The first
statement to be presented shows the average consumption of cotton
in the United States, in the United Kingdom, and on the continent
of Europe, in the five years ending with each census period of the
United States from 1830 to 1880, and the total consumption for the
years 1890, 1900, and each succeeding year to 1905:
COTTON CONSUMPTION IN UNITED STATES AND EUROPE: 183O TO 1905 ^
{Expressed in thousands of hales of 500 pounds each.)
Five years ending —
1830
1840
1850
i860
1870
1880
Year —
1890
1900
1905
United
States
United
Kingdom
Continent
of Europe
AVERAGE CONSUMPTION
104
204
442
650
700
1,234
569
925
1,166
1,812
2,111
2,339
329
503
621
1,192
1,473
1,964
TOTAL CONSUMPTION
2,3862
3,856
4,310
3,312
3,334
3,620
3,422
4,576
5,148
But a far more accurate test for comparison is afforded by the num-
ber of spindles in the mills of the several countries. Table 11 [the
following table on page 748] shows the number of cotton spindles in
the world, in the autumn of 1906. . . .
Taking the textile industry as a whole, it may be concluded that
the United States, while standing at some distance from the United
Kingdom, is nevertheless second only to it. Considering the several
branches of the textile industry, we find that the United States stands
first among silk manufacturing countries and second in the manufac-
ture of cotton. In the manufacture of wool it is probably inferior
1 The authority for this statement is Mr. Thomas R. Ellison, of Liverpool.
2 Census figures.
748
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
to Germany and France, although not greatly behind either
country.
world's cotton spindles, by countries: 1905-6^
COUNTRY
Total
United States:
Cotton growing states
All other states
Europe :
United Kingdom
Germany
Russia
France
Austria
Italy
Spain
Switzerland
Belgium
Portugal
All other Europe
British India
Japan
China
Brazil
Mexico
Canada
Other countries
Cotton
spindles
(number)
1 20,090,50 i
8,994,868
16,255,228
48,826,144
9,730,209
7,000,000
6,702,800
3,621,220
3,500,000
1,800,000
1,462,75-'
1,122,000
350,000
1,115,000
5,250,000
1,403,740
619,648
733,890
628,096
775.000
200,000
The flax and jute industries are carried on in this country on a
small scale. No figures can be presented to indicate even api)ro.\i-
mately the rank of the different countries, but there is no doubt
that the United States occupies a rank relatively low. On the other
hand, the manufacture of cordage and twine from hemp is ver\
extensive, and in this the United States probably takes the first or the
second rank.
* The statistics for the United States were collected by this Bureau. Those for
other countries have been compiled from a number of authorities, among ihcm
being the International Federation of Master Cotton S|)inners' and Manufat
turers' Associations, Manchester, Eng.; the Financial and Commercial ChronicK
New York; Cotton Facts: Lyon & Co., Bombay; and Mitsui Bussiin Kaisha
OBakA.
MANUFACTURES, TARIFF, AND TRUSTS 749
E. Cotton Manufactures, 1860-1880 ^
The steadily growing population of the United States with its high standard
|of living has furnished American manufacturers a market for large quantities of
[staple goods, in the production of which improved machinery and large-scale
fmethods have been characteristic. In cotton manufactures there was the addi-
Itional advantage of cheap raw material close at hand.
The cotton manufacture of the United States may now be con-
sidered more firmly established than ever before. The method on
I which the business is conducted in the United States varies greatly
from that of any other country; and this difference arises mainly
from a difference not only in the habits and customs of the people,
fbut also in their condition and intelligence.
The home market is the most important one, and may long con-
tinue to be so, although the export demand for our fabrics now takes
I from 7 to 8 per cent, of our annual product, and is likely to increase.
In contrast with the cotton manufacturer of Great Britain, our
[principal rival, we are therefore called upon to meet the demands of
an intelligent class of customers living under substantially uniform
I conditions and varying but little in their requirements. Hence we
are not called upon for the great variety of fabrics that must be sup-
plied by Great Britain. In consequence of this demand for a great
variety of fabrics, the work of the cotton manufacture of England
is much more divided than with us. . . .
The principal market for our own fabrics is found among the thrifty
working people, who constitute the great mass of our population.
It has therefore happened that, although we have not until re-
cently undertaken the manufacture of very fine fabrics, the average
quality of fabrics that we do make is better than that of any other
nation, with the possible exception of France. It is for the wants of
the million that our cotton factories are mainly worked, and we have
ceased to import staple goods, and shall never be likely to resume
their import. . . .
In i860 the whole number of spindles in the United States was
5,235,000. ... In 1880 the number of spindles operated in the
specific manufacture of cotton fabrics was 10,653,435; but the spindle
has changed in its productive power, and each spindle of 1880 was
much more effective than that of i860. . . .
In i860 the average product of one operative, working one year,
was 5,317 pounds; in 1880, 7,928 pounds of drill, such as is exported
1 Report on the Manufactures of the United States at the Tenth Census. (Wash-
ington, 1883), II, 946-8.
750
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
to China. Assuming 5 pounds, or about 16 yards, as the annual re-
quirement of a Chinaman for dress, in i860 one Lowell operative,
working one year, clothed 1,063 Chinese; in 1880 one could supply
1,586. . . .
F. Growth of Cotton Manufactures^ 1860-igio ^
The further growth of the manufacture of cotton goods is here shown, brmging
the statistics down to the date of the last census.
The following table gives comparative statistics for the cotton-
goods industry, as a whole, from 1859 to 1909, inclusive:
Num-
Wage
Value
ber of
earners
Cost of
Value of
added by
estab-
Ush-
(average
num-
Wages
materials
products
manufac-
ture
ments
ber)
1909
1,324
378,880
$132,859,145
$371,009,470
$628,391,813
$257,382,343
1904
1,154
315,874
96,205,796
286,255,303
450,467,704
164,212,401
1899
1,055
302,861
86,689,752
176,551,527
339,200,320
162,648,793
1889
905
218,876
66,024,538
154,912,979
267,981,724
113,068,745
1879'....
7S6
172,544
42,040,510
102,206,347
192,090,110
89,883,763
1869
956
135,369
39,044,132
111,736,936
177,489,739
65,752,803
1859
1,091
122,028
23,940,108
57,285,534
115,681,774
58,396,240
G. Cotton Manufactures in the Souths i8go-igoo '
One of the most important economic developments of recent years has been
the growth of cotton manufacturing in the south. It has meant the industrial
awakening of that section of the country, and severe competition for New England
mills.
The following tabular statement will bring to light the most
interesting and the most important fact relating to the growth of the
cotton-manufacturing industry during the decade 1890-1900:
1 The Thirteenth Census of the United States, Taken in the Year jqio. Volunu
VIII: Manufactures (Washington, 1913), 39i-
» Does not include 249 mills classed as "special mills" making hosiery, braid
ing, tapes, and fancy fabrics, and mixed goods or other fabrics not sold as specin
manufactures of wool or cotton. In these establishments there were 1 2,928 emplo\
ecs, receiving $3,573,909 in wages. The cotton consumed cost $2,338,385, and tin
value of the products was $18,860,273.
» Twelfth Census of the United States. Census Bulletin 215 (Washington,
1902), 12-3.
MANUFACTURES, TARIFF, AND TRUSTS
SECTIONAL DISTRIBUTION OF ESTABLISHMENTS
751
GEOGRAPHICAL DIVISIONS
New England states
Middle states
Southern states . . . .
Western states
Total
1900
1890
332
402
225
239
400
239
16
25
973
905
[880
439
139
161
17
75f>
. . . The growth of the industry in the South is the one great
fact in its history during the past ten years. It will be seen that in
1880 there were, in that part of the country, 161 establishments only
which made reports to the census; in 1890 there were only 239, an
increase of 78, or 48.4 per cent; and in 1900 there were 400 separate
establishments, an increase from 1890 of 161, or 67.4 per cent. A
scrutiny of the returns by states shows that substantially the whole
increase in the South has been in the 4 states of North Carolina, South
Carolina, Georgia, and Alabama. . . .
The earliest Southern enterprises were not in all cases begun as
first-class establishments. Some of them were equipped with dis-
carded machinery from Northern mills. But the manufacturers
quickly learned the lesson that there is no industry in which profits
are more directly proportioned to the perfection and speed of the
machinery than in the spinning and weaving of cotton; and the old
spindles and looms were speedily replaced with others of the newest
pattern. A great proportion of the mills built and started within
the past decade have been thoroughly up to date in all respects. . . .
The growth of the manufacturing industry in the South has been
fairly continuous during the past ten years. How large it has been
the figures show. For the most part the product of the region has
been coarse or medium goods, as is usually the case in the early
stages of the industry. ... A considerable part of the product of
the region is exported. The industry is now important enough in
the 4 states of North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, and Alabama
to consume nearly one-third of the crop of cotton grown in those
states; and both North Carolina and South Carolina spin more
than half the cotton grown within their limits.
752 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
H. The Iron and Steel Industry^ 1880 ^
By 1880 the iron and steel industry of the United States was entering upon the
period of development which enabled it in the next two decades to become the
leading producer of pig iron and of iron and steel manufactures in the world. Im-
provements in transportation facilities, the growth of an enormous domestic
market, the exploitation of rich deposits of iron ore, and improvements in methods
of production all contributed to this development.
The present condition of the iron and steel industries of the
United States is one of great prosperity; yet they are subject to dis-
advantages from which the corresponding industries of other countries
are relieved. It is true that it cannot now be said, as it was once said,
that they lack the skill, or the capital, or the extensive and complete
establishments of other countries; they are no longer infant industries
in any sense; nor can it be said that the natural resources for the manu-
facture of iron and steel in this country are not abundant and varied.
But in comparison with the iron and steel industries of other countries
they are at a disadvantage in two important particulars. The wages
of labor are much higher in this country than in any other ironmaking
country in the world; and the raw materials of production, rich and
abundant as they are, are in the main so remote from each other that
a heavy cost for their transportation is incurred to which no other
ironmaking country is subjected.
With reference to wages, a single illustration will show the dis-
parity that exists in the iron and steel industries of this country and
Europe. At Pittsburgh the price of puddling, or boiling, iron was
fixed for one year on the 30th of May, 1 881, in an agreement between
the employers and their workmen, at a minimum of $5.50 per ton,
the price to be advanced if the price of bar iron should advance beyond
2^ cents a pound. Of the $5.50 the puddler's helper receives about
one-third. ... In England the wages of iron and steel workers are
probably higher than in any other part of Europe. . . . The
wages of puddlers for the three months beginning on the ist of
August, 1881, was 7s. per ton, or about $1.75, of which sum thi
puddler's helper, in accordance with the English custom, receives
about one-third. . . .
With regard to the cost of transporting raw materials in the United
States and Europe, the testimony of a distinguished English ironmaster
will be suflScient to show the great disparity which exists in the dis-
tances over which they must be transported. Mr. I. Lowthian Bell, a
' Report on the Manufactures of the United States at the Tenth Census. (Wash-
ington, 1883), II, 877-8, 886, 888-9.
MANUFACTURES, TARIFF, AND TRUSTS 753
commissioner from Great Britain to the Philadelphia exhibition of
1876, says in his official report: "The vast extent of the territory
of the United States renders that possible which in Great Britain
is physically impossible; thus it may and it does happen that in the
former distances of nearly 1,000 miles may intervene between the ore
and the coal, whereas with ourselves it is difficult to find a situation
in which the two are separated by even 100 miles." From the ore
mines of Lake Superior and Missouri to the coal of Pennsylvania is
1,000 miles. CoUinsville coke is taken 600 miles to the blast furnaces
of Chicago, and 750 miles to the blast furnaces of St. Louis. The
average distance over which all the domestic iron ore which is con-
sumed in the blast furnaces of the United States is transported is
not less than 400 miles, and the average distance over which the
fuel which is used to smelt it is transported is not less than 200
miles. . . .
But it is not only on the raw materials that the cost of trans-
portation operates as an impediment to low prices for manufactured
products. The manufactured products themselves must frequently
be transported long distances to find consumers. . . .
The people of the United States are the largest per capita consumers
of iron and steel in the world, and of all nations they are also the largest
aggregate consumers of these products. Great Britain makes more
iron than we do, but she exports about one-half of all that she makes.
She exports more than one-half of the steel that she makes, and yet
makes but little more than this country. No other European country
equals Great Britain either in the per capita or aggregate consumption
of iron and steel. This country is not now producing as much iron
and steel as it consumes, but imports large quantities of both products,
Great Britain being the principal source of our foreign supply. Our
exports of iron and steel are only nominal.
A simple enumeration of some of the more important uses to
which iron and steel are applied by our people will show how prominent
is the part these metals play in the development of American civiliza-
tion and in the advancement of our greatness and power as a
nation. . . .
In reviewing the historical pages of this report the most striking
fact that presents itself for consideration is the great stride made by
the world's iron and steel industries in the last hundred years. . . .
A hundred years ago there were no railroads in the world for the trans-
portation of freight and passengers. Iron ships were unknown, and
all the iron bridges in the world could be counted on the fingers of
754 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
one hand. Without railroads and their cars and locomotives, and
without iron ships and iron bridges, the world needed but little iron.
Steel was still less a necessity, and such small quantities of it as werr
made were mainly used in the manufacture of tools with cutting
edges.
The great progress made by the world's iron and steel industries
in the last hundred years is as marked in the improvement of the
processes of manufacture as in the increased demand for iron and
steel products. . . .
The next most important fact that is presented in the historical
chapters of this report is the astonishing progress which the iron and
steel industries of the United States have made within the last twenty
years. During this period we have not only utilized all contemporane-
ous improvements in the manufacture of iron and steel, but we have
shown a special aptitude, or genius, for the use of such improvements
as render possible the production of iron and steel in large quan-
tities. ... If our iron and steel industries had not been developed
in the past twenty years as they have been it is clear that our railroad
system could not have been so wonderfully extended and strengthened,
and without this extension of our railroads we could not have pro-
duced our large annual surplus of agricultural products for exporta-
tion, nor could our population have been so largely increased by
immigration as it has been. . . .
The position of the United States among iron and steel producing
countries in 1880 is correctly indicated in the following table of the
world's production of pig iron and steel of all kinds, which we have
compiled from the latest and most reliable statistics that are accessible.
This table places the world's production of pig iron in 1880 at
17,688,596 gross tons, and the world's production of steel in the same
year at 4,343,719 gross tons. The percentage of pig iron produced
by the United States was nearly 22, and its percentage of steel was
nearly 29, being surpassed in the production of each only by Great
Britain.
I. The Iron and Steel Industry^ 1870-igoo *
The growth of this important industry is shown in the following table
The decline in the number of establishments should be noted in connection with
the increase in capital, labor, and output.
^ Twelfth Census of the United States. Census Bulletin 246 (Washington,
1902), 6.
MANUFACTURES, TARIFF, AND TRUSTS
755
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756 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
II. Tariff
A. Tariff Changes, 1860-1882 ^
Even before the outbreak of the Civil War the financial necessities of the
government led to an increase in tariff rates, and during the war itself they were
raised to prohibitory heights. When the cessation of hostilities led to a reduction
of expenditures, Congress preferred to remove the more onerous internal revenue
taxes and leave the tariff almost undisturbed. A ten per cent reduction in 1872
lasted only one year, so that in 1882 the tariff was still practically on the war
level. Roberts was an ardent protectionist.
The bill which has become well known as the Morrill tariff, and
which, with increments and changes, has stood for over twenty
years, -was introduced by Hon. Justin S. Morrill, of Vermont, on
the 1 2th of March, i860, and passed the House of Representatives
in May of that year. . . .
A general increase was made in rates, and many duties were
changed to specific sums from rates varying with value. . . .
Seven states had proclaimed ordinances of secession before this
act was passed, and the demands of the national government at once
began to increase with a rapidity calculated to paralyze weak minds.
The special session of Congress, which assembled on the fourth of
July, 1861, had no more important task than to provide money for
the national treasury. Mr. Stevens, from the Committee on Ways
and Means, however, announced that no general revision of the tariff
would be undertaken. By an act which bears date August 5, 1861,
the rates were advanced, and tea and coffee, with some other com-
modities, were subjected to duty. The like process of general increase
was carried still farther by the act of December 24, 1861. The aim
was the same in the statute of July 14, 1862. By joint resolution of
April 29, 1864, all duties, except upon white paper, were increased
fifty per cent, for sixty days. On the 30th of June, 1864, a permanent
increase was provided for. Mr. Morrill in explaining the bill de-
clared that its primary object was to increase the revenue, and at the
same time to shelter and nurse our domestic products, from whicli
at that time we were drawing much the largest receipts into the
treasury. March 3, 1865, another bill was passed to adjust the duties
on imports to the internal taxes which had been augmented. On th(
28th of July, a law of four pages was found to be necessary for correc
• Government Revenue: especially Ihc American System. By Ellis H. Roberl^
(Boston, 1884), 1x5-8.
MANUFACTURES, TARIFF, AND TRUSTS 757
tions and adjustment of imposts. March 2, 1867, the imposts on
wool were increased.
At this point the war revenues culminated. The process of de-
cided reduction was begun by the act of July 14, 1870. Under that
statute the rates on teas, which had been twenty-five cents a pound,
were made fifteen cents; coffee, which had been five cents, was made
three cents; pig-iron, which had been rated at $9 a ton, was carried
down to $7. Spices were generally reduced. Other imposts were
changed in a like spirit. The estimated decrease in duties was
$29,000,000 a year, from the operation of this law. Tea and coffee
were placed on the free list May i, 1872. On the first of June, 1872,
another act was passed still further cutting down the war imposts.
It was reported by Mr. Dawes, of Massachusetts, and one of its
provisions was to strike off ten per cent from the rates collected on
most of the commodities, and to put others into the free list. The
effect of the acts of May and June, 1872, was estimated to be the
reduction of the receipts from customs to the extent of $44,374,721
a year.
The business reaction which produced the panic of 1873, and the
consequent falling off in government receipts, in addition to the esti-
mated results of legislation, led to the restoration of this ten per cent.,
March 3, 1873. No important changes in duties occurred until the
appointment of the tariff commission, May 15, 1882, and its report
leading to the act of March 3, 1883. . . .
B. Reduction of the Tariff Urged, 1882 ^
The first tariff commission in the United States was appointed in 1 88 2 , Though
the protected interests were strongly represented on it, the commission brought
in a report urging a radical reduction from the existing high duties. Congress,
however, paid Uttle attention to their report in framing the Tariff Act of 1883, and
made but sHght reductions and those mainly in the non-protected groups.
. . . Early in its deliberations the Commission became convinced
that a substantial reduction of tariff duties is demanded, not by a
mere indiscriminate popular clamor, but by the best conservative
opinion of the country, including that which has in former times been
most strenuous for the preservation of our national industrial de-
fenses. . . .
Entertaining these views, the Commission has sought to present
a scheme of tariff duties in which substantial reduction should be the
distinguishing feature. The average reduction in rates, including
^ Report of the Tarif Commission. (Washington, 1882), I, 5, 6.
758 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
that from the enlargement of the free list and the abolition of the
duties on charges and commissions, at which the Commission has
aimed is not less on the average than 20 per cent., and it is the opin-
ion of the Commission that the reduction will reach 25 per cent.
C. Changes in the Tariff iSS^iSgy
By 1883 the manufacturing interests were strong enough to resist any effort
to reduce the protection granted in the tariff, and the act of 1883 made an average
reduction of only about 5 per cent, though the extract here quoted, from a Re-
publican report, gives a different impression. A few years later these duties yielded
sums far in excess of the needs of government, and the Democrats proposed to lower
the tariff and thus reduce the revenue. The Mills Bill was not enacted into law,
however, and two years later the Republicans, who were now in control, passed the
McKinley Act, which aimed to reduce the revenue by raising duties to an almost
prohibitory point. This was reversed four years later by the Wilson Act, which
was passed by a Democratic Congress and essentially reduced duties, putting many
articles on the free Ust. The panic of 1893 and resulting depression made the
revenue from this act insufficient, and in 1897 the Dingley Act advanced duties
even beyond the point they had reached under the act of 1890, or to an average
rate of 57 per cent, the highest in the history of the tariff.
The Aldrich Report, 1888
Mr. Aldrich, from the Committee on Finance, submitted the
following report: . . .
The criticism of our tariff laws which is urged with most per-
tinacity is based upon the assumption that we are maintaining in
time of profound peace a war tariff enacted to provide for the enor-
mous expenditures incurred between 1861 and 1866. It is frequently
claimed that the rates which are now imposed are greater even than
those which were levied during the war. . . .
The revision of March 3, 1883, left the rates upon nearly all
articles mentioned in our tariff schedules greatly below those which
had been levied prior to July 14, 1870. For instance, the rate on
every item in the woolen schedide had been largely reduced. This i^
also true of every item in the cotton schedule except manufacture
of cotton not otherwise provided for. All manufactures of iron ami
steel, with a few unimportant exceptions, had been changed. All
but two of the rates in the earthenware schedule had been amended
The duties upon common window glass had been largely reduced
The chemical schedule had been entirely recast, and great reduction ^
» Customs Tarif: Senate and House Reports, 1888, i8go, 1894, 1897. 6olh
Cong., 2d seas., Sen h.w v<, c,^ (W.isliini'ioii m)0()), 78 -So. 15-^'. 242-3, 282-<)i,
547-53. passim.
MANUFACTURES, TARIFF, AND TRUSTS 759
in rates had taken place. The Hst of the articles which remain dutiable
at rates which were imposed in 1870 includes the agricultural products,
a few manufactured articles of minor importance with rates from 20
to 35 per cent, several fancy articles, like perfumery, cosmetics, and
artificial flowers, upon which a revenue duty of 50 per cent was laid,
and the articles enumerated in the flax, hemp, and jute schedule, upon
which the duties have never been protective. As to all the great
protected industries, changes in phraseology and radical reductions in
rates had been made. . . .
The Mills Report, 1888
To Reduce Taxation and Simplify the Laws in Relation to the Collection
of the Revenue
The Committee on Ways and Means, to whom was referred the
annual message of the President, calling the attention of Congress
to the large surplus now in the Treasury, daily growing larger on
account of the excess of receipts over expenditures, have given to
the subject that careful consideration which its importance demands,
and in response to his recommendations beg leave to report to the
House a bill to prevent the accumulation of surplus revenue by re-
ducing the present excessive and unjust rates of taxation imposed
upon the people.
Our revenues for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1887, amounted
to $371,403,277.66, while our expenditures for the same time,
including interest and sinking fund for the public debt, amounted to
$315,835,428.12; leaving a surplus of $55,567,849.54 over and
above all requirements for current expenditure. ...
There are two ways in which this excessive accumulation may be
prevented. We may reduce taxation to the level of expenditures and
leave in the pockets of the people all moneys not needed for public
purposes, or we may raise expenditures to the height of taxation,
seeking out new and useless objects of appropriation on which to
lavish the great and growing revenues, not needed for any legitimate
wants of the public service.
If we adopt the latter course these very objects of useless expendi-
ture will gather upon Congress in such increasing numbers and with
such growing demands as to fasten upon the Government a perma-
nent and unchangeable policy of extravagant and reckless appropria-
tions. . . .
There is but one safe course, and that is to reduce taxation to the
76o READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
necessary requirements of an honest, economical, and efficient admin-
istration of Government. Having determined upon this course as
the one which a wise and just policy demands, we are confronted
with the question. Upon what articles shall the reduction be made?
Shall we leave our import duties as they are and repeal the internal-
revenue taxes on alcoholic liquors and tobacco? Or shall we leave
the internal-revenue tax as it is and make the reduction on imports
alone? Or shall we reduce the taxes on both?
The committee have determined to recommend a reduction of the
revenues from both customs and internal taxes. They have given
the whole subject a careful and painstaking examination, and in the
revision of the schedules have endeavored to act with a spirit of
fairness to all interests. They have carefully kept in view at all times
the interests of the manufacturer, the laborer, the producer, and the
consumer. . . .
McKiNLEY Report, 1890
To Reduce the Reventie and Equalize Duties on Imports^ and for
Other Purposes
Mr. McKinley, from the Committee on Ways and Means, sub-
mitted the following report (to accompany H. R. 9416):
The Committee on Ways and Means, to whom was referred that
part of the message of the President of the United States relating
to public revenues, have carefully considered the subject, and report
back the accompanying bill with a favorable recommendation.
We are advised from the annual report of the Secretary of the
Treasury that the ordinary revenues of the Government, actual and
estimated, for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1890, will be $385,000,000,
and that the expenditures for the same period, actual and estimated,
will be $293,000,000, leaving a surplus of $92,000,000. . . .
The exact effect upon the revenues of the Government of the
proposed bill is difficult of ascertainment. That there will be a siil
stantial reduction, as we shall show, admits of no doubt. It is noi
believed that the increase of duties upon wools and woolen goods, and
upon glassware, will have the effect of increasing the revenues. That
would, of course, follow, if the importations of the last fiscal year won
hereafter to be maintained, which, however, is altogether improl
able. The result will be that importations will be decreased, an
therefore the amount of revenue collected from these sources wii
be diminished.
MANUFACTURES, TARIFF, AND TRUSTS 761
In every case of increased duty except that imposed upon tin plate
(which does not go into effect until July i, 1891) and upon Unen fabrics
the effect will be to reduce rather than enlarge the revenues, because
importations will fall off. It was the aim of the committee to fix the
duties upon that class of manufactured goods and farm products
which can be supplied at home so as to discourage the use of like
foreign goods and products, and secure to our own people and our own
producers the home market, believing that competition among our-
selves will secure reasonable prices to consumers in the future as it
has invariably done in the past. . . .
We have not been so much concerned about the prices of the
articles we consume as we have been to encourage a system of home
production which shall give fair remuneration to domestic producers
and fair wages to American workmen, and by increased production
and home competition insure fair prices to consumers. . . .
Wilson Report, 1893
To Reduce Taxation, to Provide Revenue for the Government, and for
Other Purposes
Mr. Wilson, of West Virginia, from the Committee on Ways and
Means, submitted the following report to accompany H. R. 4864:
The Committee on Ways and Means, to which have been referred
sundry House bills imposing or regulating custom duties upon articles
imported into the United States from other countries, have prepared
and herewith present a bill which contemplates a general revision,
reduction, and simplification of our system of import duties, and sub-
mit it with the following explanatory statement:
The American people, after the fullest and most thorough deba|;e
ever given by any people to their fiscal policy, have deliberately and
rightly decided that the existing tariff is wrong in principle and griev-
ously unjust in operation. They have decided as free men must
always decide, that the power of taxation has no lawful or constitu-
tional exercise except for providing revenue for the support of Gov-
ernment. . . .
The average rate of duties levied under the existing law upon
the dutiable goods imported in 1892 was 48.71 per cent. Had the
duties proposed in the present bill been levied upon that year's im-
portation of dutiable goods, the average rate on them, including
those we transfer to the free list, would have been 30.31 per cent.
As so many of the rates of the present law are really prohibitory, it is
762
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
impossible to say what its real rate of taxation is, but it is safe to
affirm that it is much higher than any import tables will disclose. . . .
Dingle Y Report, 1897
Proposed Revision of Tariff, — Revenue and Protection
Mr. Dingley, from the Committee on Ways and Means, sub-
mitted the following report (to accompany H. R. 379):
The Committee on Ways and Means, to which was referred the
President's message convening Congress in extraordinary session for
the purpose of raising additional revenue required to meet the national
expenses, and also the bill (H. R. 379) entitled "A bill to provide
revenue for the support of the Government and to encourage the in-
dustries of the United States," beg leave to submit the following
report:
For nearly four years the revenue has been inadequate to meet
the current expenditures and pay the interest on the war debt. The
deficiency during this period has been as follows;
Fiscal year ended June 30 —
1894 $69,803,260
1895 43,805,223
1896 25,203,246
1897 (estimated) 65,000,000
Total deficiency 203,81 1,729
The revenue derived from duties on imports, and also from internal -
revenue taxes, for each fiscal year beginning with 1892 was as follows:
Year
1892
1893
1894
1895
1896
1897 (estimated).
From
customs
$177,452,964
203,355,016
131.818,530
152,158,617
160 021,751
140,000,000
From inter-
nal revenue
Si53»97i.o
161,027,(1
147,111-^
143.421/'.
146,762,864
150,000,000
The plain duty, therefore, of Congress — a duty emphasized by
the President's message laid before the House on the opening day
of this extraordinary session — is to so revise the tarifif as to secui
MANUFACTURES, TARIFF, AND TRUSTS 763
an increase of revenue from duties on imports substantially equal to
what has been lost, first, by the anticipated, and then by the par-
tially realized, tariff reductions made by the act of 1894. .
Another imperative duty resting on this Congress is to so adjust
duties in such a revision of the tariff to secure needed revenue to
carry on the Government as will better protect the many industries
which have so seriously suffered the past three years from unequal
foreign competition, and from the consequent loss of purchasing power
of the masses of the people, upon which the demand for products
and the prosperity of every citizen depends. . . .
The reciprocity policy inaugurated in the tariff of 1890, which
proved so great a success in the brief period of its existence, is not
only restored, but enlarged. The provisions of the act of 1890,
authorizing the President to impose duties on coffee, tea, skins, and
hides, in case the countries exporting such articles decline to extend
equivalent concessions to exports from the United States, are re-
enacted, sugar being transferred to the schedule of articles on which
duties are imposed. . . .
D. Tarif Act of 1909^
Changing economic conditions, especially the growth of industrial combina-
tions and the rise in prices, led to a demand that the tariff be revised. In 1909,
accordingly, the Payne-Aldrich tariff was passed by a Republican administration.
The following extract is taken from a speech in defense of this act by the Hon.
Charles H. Morgan of Missouri, in the House of Representatives, May 27, 19 10.
Here the claim is made that the tariff schedules were in every case adjusted to
differences in the cost of production between the United States and foreign coun-
tries. In spite of the large claims put forth, the results of the act were disappoint-
ing, for the changes downward were slight and unimportant, while the monopolized
industries retained their former high rates.
The greatest work of this Congress, and one that reflects the
greatest credit upon the administration and will be its chief glory
in the years to come, is the enactment of the Payne law. . . . With
the RepubHcan Members of the Committee on Ways and Means
the question was not whether the rates of duty as provided by the
Dingley law should be increased or reduced, but what was the cost
of production at home and abroad. In other words, the question with
them was one of protection to American labor, and it can be asserted
truthfully that in no case was the duty increased beyond the necessary
rate for protection, nor was it knowingly reduced below that point.
1 Congressional Record. 6ist Cong., 2d sess. Vol. 45, Part IX, Appendix
(Washington, 1910), 285-6.
764 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
The question has been raised whether the Payne law as a whole was
an increase of rates or a reduction of rates upon the Dingley law. A
comparison of the two laws will show that there was a reduction upon
articles of common use throughout the country, without going below
a protective duty, while for the purposes of revenue there was an
increase upon articles of luxury. In a speech made in this Chamber
on May 1 2 by the distinguished chairman of the Committee on Ways
and Means, Hon. Sereno E. Payne, of New York, whose fairness and
ability no one questions, a Hst of reductions was given which I hope
may be read by every voter in the country. Among the articles
upon which the tariff was reduced are agricultural implements,
wagons, mowers, binders, harrows, rakes, plows, cultivators, and
thrashers. Upon these articles the reduction was 25 per cent. . . .
As shown by Mr. Payne and Mr. Fordney, under the Payne
law there has been a decrease in the tariff on goods imported into this
country valued at about $5,000,000,000, while there has been an in-
crease in the tariff on goods imported valued at $241,000,000. Let
us see upon what character of goods these increases have been made.
First, liquors, alcoholic compounds, automobiles, spirits, wines (in-
cluding champagne and imported liquors), embossed paper and
ornamental things, and upon zinc ore and diamonds.
There has been much said here and throughout the country as to
whether this revision has been up or down, and whether we have kept
the pledges of our party, made at Chicago. The mere reading of the
national Republican platform of 1908 will settle in the minds of the
most skeptical this question. . . .
Not one word as to a revision upward or downward, but a plain,
unequivocal declaration in favor of protection, by a duty to make up
the difference between cost abroad and at home. If the duty under
the Dingley law was found too low to make up this difference, it was
raised; if at the point, it was left alone; if found above the point of
protection, it was unhesitatingly lowered; and the law as it now stands
is a real compliance with the party policy and the parly pledges.
Can any honest person, reading our platform and comparing tlu
Payne law with the Dingley law, contend for a moment that we ha\
not carried out our party pledges? We have kept steadfastly in view
the interests of our people and have placed a duty on the arlicks
imported from foreign countries, the rate being no greater and no less
than sufficient to meet the competition of cheap foreign labor and at
the same time maintain the higher wages paid in this country in th(
mines, the factories, the mills, and on the farms.
MANUFACTURES, TARIFF, AND TRUSTS 765
E. Tarif Act of igij 1
In spite of protectionist defense of the tariff of 1909 there was strong popular
dissatisfaction with this measure, and largely as a result of this feeling the Demo-
crats were returned to power at the next election, pledged to revise the tariff down-
ward. Accordingly they passed the Underwood tariff of 1913, which materially
reduced duties and enlarged the free Ust. In doing this a considerable sacrifice
of revenue was made, which they aimed to make good by the passage of the in-
come tax law in the same year.
UNDERWOOD REPORT, 1913
To Reduce Tariff Duties, to Provide Revenue for the Government, and
for other Purposes
Mr. Underwood, from the Committee on Ways and Means, sub-
mitted the following report.
The Committee on Ways and Means, to whom was referred House
bill H. R. 3321, having had the same under consideration, report it
back to the House without amendment and recommend that the
bill do pass. . . .
The tariff situation resulting from 50 years of high protective
rates, had gradually become intolerable; and five years ago the
dissatisfaction with prevailing duties expressed itself in so unmis-
takable a manner as to lead to a revision of rates. Twelve years of
experience since the revision in 1897 had shown many points at which
bad or erroneous work had been done during the hasty process of
framing and passing the Dingley Act. Conditions of production and
of business organization had greatly changed, so that the old rates
upon many commodities, even if at first defensible, had become ob-
solete. A very great and increasing dissatisfaction on the part of
the consuming masses, due to an advance in prices and in the cost
of living, constituted the important factors in the situation. Tariff
revision in 1909 was therefore politically unavoidable, and the
country had reason to demand of the party then in authority a
modification of the extreme policy which had for many years been
creating and aggravating tariff abuses.
The expectation of redress was blasted by the tariff act of 1909.
This measure, if anything, made worse the conditions which had
given rise to its passage. It brought no real reduction in the level
of rates of duty prevaiHng, and for some commodities resulted in
I
Report of the Committee of Ways and Means. 63d Cong., ist sess., House
Report No. 5 (Washington, 1913), i-xvii, passim.
766
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
advances, due largely to reclassifications which concealed the real
rates. . . .
Again commanded by the electorate in the autumn of 191 2 to
renew the effort at tariff revision, and encouraged by a sweeping vic-
tory at the polls, which placed every branch of the Government in
the control of the Democratic Party, the Ways and Means Com-
mittee, after due deliberation, have completed a measure, . . .
intended to revise the whole of the existing system of tariff rates. . . .
Certain distinct economic developments between the years of
1897 and 1 913 must be studied in close connection with the working
of the tariff law. . . .
Probably the most striking economic change since 1897 has been
the tremendous increase in the cost of living — a situation which has
attracted the anxious attention of economists the world over. The
following figures represent the relative advance in living costs that
has taken place during the critical part of the period in question in
the United States:
Table i. — Relative wholesale prices, and per cent of increase over iSgy
Commodity
Price,
1897
Price,
1900
Increase
over 1897
Price,
1910
Increase
over 1897
Farm products
Food
85.2
87.7
91. 1
86.6
94-4
89.8
92.1
89.7
»
109.5
104.2
106.8
120.5
115 7
106. 1
109.8
no. 5
Per cent.
28.5
18.8
17.2
39 I
22.5
18. 1
19.2
23.1
164.6
128.7
123.7
128.5
117. 0
III. 6
133 I
131 6
Percent.
93 2
46.7
35-8
48.2
23 9
24.2
44S
46.7
Clothing
Metals and implements.
Drugs and chemicals. . .
House furnishing goods .
Miscellaneous.
All commodities
In close conjunction with the advance in cost of living and with
the practical reservation of the field of domestic production to tlu
manufacturers in the more important lines, should be considered
the development of industrial combinations or trusts which has been
so active during recent years. . . .
The rapid growth in population and the failure of domestic
resources to meet the demand for an increased supply of agricultural
products, and in some respects for manufactured goods, have been
most noteworthy during the years under consideration. That the
q>eedy exhaustion of many natural resources is to be feared unless
MANUFACTURES, TARIFF, AND TRUSTS 767
access to a fresh supply is gained, no one who considers the subject
from an unbiased standpoint can doubt. This is notably true in the
case of such articles as timber, ores, minerals, and other substances
whose supply can not be increased and whose exhaustion is merely
a question of the rate at which they are taken from their original
sources. That the protective system has been greatly influential
in maintaining a too rapid rate of depletion of natural resources in
order to satisfy the constantly increasing demands of a rising popula-
tion is an unmistakable fact. . . .
There is another serious condition which must be directly attrib-
uted to the tariff, but of which little is usually said. This is the exist-
ence of obsolete plants and methods in many lines of industry, old
machinery and out-of-date methods being continued in operation for
years after they have been practically eliminated elsewhere. . . .
The information in the hands of the Ways and Means Committee
strongly confirms the belief that there is rarely a highly protected
industry in which a considerable percentage of the plants and machin-
ery are not hopelessly behind the times. The demand for high pro-
tective duties is necessarily based upon the supposed requirements
of these plants, for in nearly every line of business the modern and
most efficient establishments are able to hold their own against any
foreign competition. These conditions constitute one of the strongest
arguments in favor of rectifying the conditions complained of by ap-
plying the impetus of moderate competition. . . .
In its tariff-revision work the committee has kept in mind the
distinction between the necessaries and the luxuries of life, reducing
the tariff burdens on the former to the lowest possible point com-
mensurate with revenue requirements and making the luxuries of
life bear their proper portion of the tariff responsibilities. . . .
The committee has had these facts in mind in the preparation of
H. R. 3321 and the attempt has been made —
1. To eliminate protection of profits and to cut off the duties
which enable industrial managers to exact a bonus for which no
equivalent is rendered.
2. To introduce in every line of industry a competitive tariff
basis providing for a substantial amount of importation, to the end
that no concern shall be able to feel that it has a monopoly of the
home market gained other than through the fact that it is able to
furnish better goods at lower prices than others.
It is felt that tariff schedules aiming at these two conditions can
damage no legitimate industry and is the least that can be asked by
768 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
those who desire the consumer to be safeguarded in some measurt
against exploitation by monopolies that now practically dictate prices
in the domestic field. ...
III. Trusts
A. The Tendency to Consolidation, igoi ^
The movement towards large-scale production had been going on fairly steadily
for half a century, but in the eighties a new tendency showed itself — the consolida-
tion of hitherto competing establishments into one large concern. This movement
was especially rapid after 1898, and to its consideration the Industrial Commission
devoted four volumes of its report.
The tendency to consolidate competing establishments in various
industries has been so pronounced in recent years as to create much
apprehension of monopoly. . . . The economic advantages of com-
bination, and the apparent success of most of the new companies,
have led many of the ablest business men and economists to the
conclusion that the combinations have become an established fac-
tor in the industrial life of the nation. Not all of the problems,
however, have been worked out, and it remains to be seen whether
or not the new companies are as safe for investment as the old, and
whether or not the public interest is in any way endangered by
them. . . .
Until after the close of the civil war business in the United
States was so much localized, on account of the lack of facilities for
transportation and the relative smallness of the capital invested,
that no large combinations were made.
The rapid development of business in the years following the war,
together with the artificial stimulus given to certain lines of industry,
either by internal-revenue legislation, as in the case of manufacture
of spirits, or by the special demand created by the war itself and l)\
the reaction following it, led to several combinations of a wider reach.
These pools in various lines of business, including agreements upon
output and prices, were found to be in each case only temporarily
effective. Whenever prices were remunerative, each competing manu-
facturer naturally found it desirable to extend his sales, and the
agreement was likely to be broken.
The application by the courts of the common law regarding ri
straint of trade also tended to weaken these pools. Under the con
* Find Report of titc Itidustrial Commission. (Washington, 1902). \i
595-600, passim.
MANUFACTURES, TARIFF, AND TRUSTS 769
mon law, both in England and in this country, contracts in restraint
of trade have been held invalid. It is true that, when the limitation
has covered only certain sections of the country or short times, con-
tracts in partial restraint of trade, if considered reasonable, ' have
been regularly upheld by the courts.
For short periods these pools and other forms of price and selling
agreements were very common. . . .
The managers of the Standard Oil Company of Ohio and of other
companies associated with it, found that pools and ordinary forms
of agreement regarding prices and output did not give sufficient
power over the various members, either to control the market or to
secure the most efficient methods of production. In consequence
this company first devised and put into effect the so-called trust
agreement, by which numerous individuals, firms, and corporations,
formerly competitors, were brought together in 1882 into the one
Standard Oil Trust. . . .
This success in harmonizing divergent interests in the oil-refining
industry led to smilar arrangements in other industries. The Dis-
tillers' and Cattle Feeders' Company (the so-called Whisky Trust),
the Sugar Refineries Company (the Sugar Trust), and other similar
organizations with large capital and influence, were soon established.
. . . Hostile decisions of the courts, together with this new legisla-
tion, forced the trusts to change their form. The Standard Oil Trust
was dissolved in 1892. . . .
In these three instances, and in others, the trust organization
thus became a combination of a different type. In the case of the
Standard Oil Company a mere harmony of interests united separate
corporations. In the case of the others named, a new corporation
had acquired all the properties. This latter form of organization,
after the declared illegality of the trusts, became the most common
whenever it seemed advisable to organize the chief competitors in
any industry under a single management.
The tendency of business toward consolidation, with the fact that
the corporation form seemed to be the one recognized by the courts
as alone feasible, influenced some States, desirous of attracting capital,
to make corporation laws favorable to combinations desiring to do
business in different sections of the country. New Jersey particu-
larly, but also Delaware, West Virginia, and others, enacted such
laws. These laws were especially liberal in permitting corporations
to carry on their business, to hold directors' meetings, and in some
cases even stockholders' meetings, outside of the boundaries of the
770 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
incorporating State. Very little inspection was provided for or
exercised. The chartered tax and annual franchise tax were made
light.
These laws, so favorable to corporations, together with the pres-
sure of competition and with the advantages of combination, led to
a very rapid increase in such industrial combinations.
The movement toward combination began among the railroads
earlier than in industrial lines, and has continued to the present
time. . . .
The rapid growth of capital, with the advantages for its use which
were shown to follow combination, has accelerated consolidation in
recent years. When goods were in general demand over wide sec-
tions of the country, when these goods were of a certain standard
uniform quality, and when the goods were bulky, so that the freight
charges formed an essential part of the cost, it was found that a com-
bination in the production of such goods might readily secure so great
an advantage over its smaller rivals that the tendency toward mo-
nopoly became strong. Combinations in the oil, sugar, salt, and sim-
ilar industries were organized early, and they became powerful. When
large establishments were necessary in order to produce at the lowest
cost, a combination had a decided advantage over an individual
competitor of small financial strength. Experience further showed
then when expensive advertising was necessary to popularize special
brands or trade-marks, combinations had an advantage over smaller
concerns.
These three influences — a standard product, very large capital,
and popular trade-marks — seem to have been particularly powerful
in bringing about the most successful combinations. On the othi
hand, whenever it it necessary for the producer to cater to the tastr
of the individual consumer, it is much more difficult to form efficient
combinations. It is true that in some cases the combination ma\'
buy up individual talent or genius, and in that way secure some
control; these, however, are exceptional, and the combination can
never expect to secure entire control of special talent.
There is reason to believe that the movement toward concentra
tion of industry will go steadily on, but there is no reason for thinl
ing that within measurable time the combinations will cover the entire
field of industry. There will still be left abundant opportunity for
individual ownership and management.
MANUFACTURES, TARIFF, AND TRUSTS 771
B. The Causes of Consolidation, igoi ^
The causes that led to the formation of the steel trust are here briefly given.
These are probably typical of the forces that led to the movement in other fields.
In 1890 there were scarcely any consolidations of the modern
type in the steel industry. With only a few exceptions there were
no concerns with a capitalization exceeding or even approaching
$20,000,000. During the middle nineties there was a gradual change
toward larger units, both by expansion and by combination; but the
depressed conditions of that period were unfavorable to the organiza-
tion of great corporations, and as late as 1898 the steel industry was
characterized by the competition of a large number of independent
concerns. The year 1898, however, witnessed a marked advance
toward consolidation. This movement progressed with great rapidity
in the next few years, until by the middle of 1901 substantially three-
fifths of the steel industry of the country was concentrated under a
single organization — the United States Steel Corporation — with an
issued capitalization, including bonded indebtedness, of over $1,400,-
000,000. . . .
While the failure of the various pools in the iron and steel trade to
establish permanently effective control over the production and prices
of iron and steel products was undoubtedly an important cause of
outright consolidation as a surer method of restricting or eliminating
competition, consolidation was not, however, resorted to for this
purpose alone. The underlying causes of consolidation in the steel
industry, which were substantially the same as those operating in
other great industries, may be defined as follows:
1. The restriction of competition.
2. Integration; that is, the linking-up of productive processes
through the acquisition, under one control, of raw materials and
manufacturing plants (and in some cases transportation facilities),
and through extensions and coordination of manufacturing processes.
3. The creation of a great amount of inflated securities.
The first of these causes, namely, the restriction or elimination of
competition, was undoubtedly the most potent. Indeed, the organ-
izers of some of these great consolidations have admitted that a desire
to control or eliminate competition was the chief reason for their
formation. This was undoubtedly true of many consolidations in the
steel industry. . . .
^ Report of the Commissioner of Corporations on thf Steel Industry. (Washing-
ton, 191 1), I, 63, 82-4.
772 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
It is worth pointing out that the technical economies of integration
were chiefly connected with combining and coordinating the succes-
sive stages of manufacture, which resulted in the saving of fuel for
reheating the metal, of labor and time in the moving or handling c
material, and in the utilization of by-products, such as blast-furnace
gas.
As distinct from economies thus brought about through such en-
largement and coordination of plants, consolidation afforded a means
for saving the payment of profits to others on the purchase of
materials. . . .
The third cause above enumerated, namely, the opportunity to
obtain profits from flotation of new securities, was undoubtedly
a very important influence in the consolidation movement. Indeed,
the proportions of this movement were largely determined by the
opportunity to market the securities thus created. So long as the
demand for such issues was maintained the supply was steadily
increased. . . .
C. Alleged Advantages of Combination, iSgy ^
A rather hostile report was made by a committee of the New York state legis-
lature on the subject of trusts from which a short extract on the alleged advantages
is given.
Let us consider some of the chief advantages that are claimed
to exist in favor of these combinations so far as they affect the public
The main advantage is stated to be that of economy in prodiu
tion reflected in lower prices to the consumer. The fact that lar<^f
economies must of necessity accrue, admits of no denial. But arc
these followed by lower prices to the consumer? We find nothin
upon the record to justify any such conclusion. It is true that sugar
for example, costs less to-day than it did prior to the time when th^
competing companies combined. But it is equally true that the cost
of the raw material has declined to a greater extent than has the price
of the refined article. Hence the consumer has not received the full
benefit of the decline in the raw material, while he has had no share
whatever in the diminished cost of production. In other cases com
bination was immediately followed by an advance in the price of th<
product. In fact there is nothing upon the record which indicate
that combination itself effected any reduction in the price to th^
* Report and Proceedings of the Joint Committee of the Senaie and Assembl
Appointed to Investigate Trusts. (Albany, 1897), 15-18.
MANUFACTURES, TARIFF, AND TRUSTS 773
consumer, or that the latter was considered with reference to any
share in the profit, all elements of economy being credited rather
to the upbuilding of the earning capacity of the capital stock.
The record does show, on the other hand, that a combination
controlling 80 per cent, of a staple product, hence a purchaser of 80
per cent, of the raw material, could and did exert substantial influence
on the price of raw material, and could, by dint of that influence, force
down the price of raw material to a point which enabled it to appear
as having decreased the price of the finished product to the consumer.
We point to this as a noteworthy incident indicating the power of a
combination thus organized, and illustrating the influence of all sim-
ilar aggregations on the price of raw material wherever the effect
of combined resources can not, from the nature of conditions, be offset
by similar combinations between widely distributed producers.
Another advantage which is said to flow from combination, is that
of a more perfect product. There is nothing upon the record to justify
this conclusion. While it may be that the normal tendency of busi-
ness is to secure the largest market, and with that end in view to give
the greatest satisfaction to the buyer, it is quite clear that substan-
tially undisputed control of both product and market enables a com-
bination to economize in quality without fear of pernicious results.
Another advantage is alleged to be that of better wages and more
constant employment of labor. We are equally unable to reach this
conclusion. No part of the profit arising from admitted economies,
and resulting in large dividends on inflated stocks, has reached labor
in the form of increased wages, while the claim of constancy of employ-
ment is negatived by the fact that factories in operation for a genera-
tion have been closed, and that workingmen, more or less continually
employed for years in a factory independently operated, have been
discharged upon its absorption by the combination. Combinations
owning factories located in different States are thereby enabled to
and do at will, here and there, close factories permanently or for long
periods of time; possessing factories of a capacity sufficient to supply
all demands, with a surplus of 40 per cent., they may at any time
cause factories in many localities to remain temporarily or perma-
nently idle and thus reduce the worker to a condition of absolute
uncertainty.
Still another alleged advantage is that of stability of price to the
consumer. This must be admitted. But the question is whether
the fixing of a stable price operates to his advantage. It is an ab-
normal and not a natural condition — a price fixed at the maximum
774 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
that the consumer will pay consistent with the marketing of the largest
volume of product practicable. The fixing of the price, whereby the
producer is able to retain all the benefits of economy and concentration
for himself, is not that kind of stability in values which appeals with
special force to the consuming public. The kind of stability which
revolutionizes the law of supply and demand and enables the combina-
tion to hold its products at a fixed price without regard to the tendenc\-
of prices and through times of depression such as have been experi-
enced for the past four years, when commodities generally have fallen
ratably in the markets, to maintain prices fixed by its arbitrary deci-
sion, produces an inequality among the people which may scarceh
be described as an advantage except to the combination itself.
D. Efeds of Industrial Combinations upon Prices and WageSy igoo ^
Data on these subjects were collected by the Department of Labor and com-
mitted to Professor Jenks for analysis and discussion. The conclusions therefore
bear an official sanction and may be regarded as fair and unbiased. Professor
Jenks is professor of economics at New York University, and has written muc h
on the subject of trusts.
This study of facts regarding industrial combinations embodies
the results of reports made by 41 combinations. . . .
Prices Fixed hy Combinations. — Probably the most important
economic effect of the combinations is to be found in their influence
upon prices; next, that of their influence upon wages. Before enter-
ing upon the study of the course of prices before and after the forma-
tion of certain special combinations it will be useful to note the direct
efforts made by the combinations to fix prices for the consumer-
Out of twenty-eight combinations answering the question as lo
whether the organization fixed the prices at which dealers shall sell
to the consumers two only answered in the affirmative. They stat^
that the penalty for making any variation from the price fixed was thr
cutting of! of the supply. Twenty-four of the combinations answered
the question directly in the negative and two reported that they did
not sell to dealers, while thirteen made no answer. It is not unlikel\-
that an effort more or less determined is made by these silent com
binations to fix prices, although one could not make that assumption
regarding them all. One combination stated that, while not attempt-
ing to fix prices, it did give an additional discount to those customer
* Trusts and Itidustriul Combinations. Hy Jeremiah W. Jenks. Bulletin «
the Department of Labor. July, 1900 (Washington, 1900), 663, 707-8, 764- >
f>78, 682-3.
MANUFACTURES, TARIFF, AND TRUSTS 775
who dealt exclusively with it, and in several cases the larger buyers
receive special discounts beyond those given to the smaller ones.
In order to determine what has in fact been done by the combina-
tions, it is necessary to make a direct comparison between the prices
of the raw materials and of the finished product. The profits which
are to be affected depend mainly upon the difference between the
two. . . .
The general result of the study of the prices in the preceding
tables in the specific instances where the margin between the price
of the raw material and of the finished product can be definitely
ascertained, and where the writer has sufficient information regard-
ing the processes so that the reasons for the variations in the prices
can be adequately checked, seems to show that the combinations
have in some cases had the power, temporarily at least, to control
the market to a considerable extent, and that in most such cases they
have used this power to increase the margin between the raw material
and the finished product — possibly by forcing the price of the
finished material up or by forcing the price of the raw material
down; possibly in certain instances the power has been exerted in
both ways. At any rate the margin has increased, and with this,
beyond question, the profits of the manufacturers. On the other
hand, several instances to which attention has been called show that
apparently this power is by no means sufficient to remove the com-
bination from the influence of competition, either actual or potential,
and that in a good many instances, within a comparatively short
time after the formation of the combination, the margin has again
decreased until it was as small as before the formation of the com-
bination, at times even smaller. It is to be expected usually, of course,
that as time passes improvements in methods of production will lessen
the cost, and that in consequence, with the same profits, the margin will
decrease somewhat. If the combinations have been enabled to make
the economies that their promoters ordinarily promise, this decrease
in the margin would be expected, even though their profits were to in-
crease somewhat. The fact that the power to increase the margin,
temporarily at least, somewhat arbitrarily, and the fact that this
margin has been increased in specific cases, seem to be clearly estab-
lished. Here again, however, one needs to be warned somewhat
against too radical or too general conclusions. . . .
Wages. — Next in importance to the effect of industrial com-
binations upon prices, if indeed not equally important, is their effect
upon wages. . . .
776 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
It will be noted that among skilled laborers the increase in the
numbers of different classes comes chiefly in those receiving from
$35 to $40 and $45 to $50 a week, so far as the higher-priced ones are
concerned. A notable increase is also shown for those receiving from
$15 to $20 and $20 to $25 a week. There was, on the other hand,
a tendency to lessen the number of the more poorly paid men. . . .
It would, of course, be too much to say that these results show
the general effect of combinations on wages. The returns are not
numerous enough. Besides that, many of the combinations were
formed at the beginning of a period of general industrial prosperity ,
so that an increase in wages was perhaps to be expected. The table>
do show, so far as the figures go, that these combinations have not
decreased wages among these classes of wage earners. Like tenden-
cies appear also in the tables regarding large private companies. . . .
CHAPTER XXII
POPULATION AND LABOR, i86o-igi5
I. Population
A. Growth of Population, lygo-igio ^
The growth of the population of the United States since the taking of the
first census is here shown. It should be noted that while there is a steady increase
in numbers the rate of increase is falling off.
Continental United States. — The population of continental United
States is 91,972,266. Compared with the population of 75,994,575 in
1900, this represents an increase during the past decade of 15,977,691,
or 21 per cent. The rate of increase was sHghtly greater than during
the preceding decade, 1890-1900, when it was 20.7 per cent.
The table following shows the population of continental United
States as enumerated at each census from 1790 to 19 10, inclusive,
together with the increase and per cent of increase during each decade,
and also adjusted percentages of increase explained in the paragraphs
below [see table on page 778].
B. The Increase of Population, igoo ^
Some of the more important results of an analysis of the population statistics
of the census of 1900 are here given. Professor Willcox is professor of statistics
at Cornell University.
The main results of the discussion of increase of population in this
bulletin may be stated briefly as follows: ....
5. Only one country, Argentina, has shown by the most recent
figures a more rapid rate of growth.
6. The present rate of growth in continental United States is prob-
ably double the average rate of Europe, is nearly double that of
Canada, exceeds by one-sixth that of Mexico, and by one-tenth that
of Australia. . . .
^ Thirteenth Census of the United States. Taken in the Year 1910. Volume I:
Population (Washington, 1913), 24.
2 A Discussion of Increase of Population. By W. F. Willcox. United States
Census Office, Bulletin 4 (Washington, 1903), 5-6.
778
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
CENSUS YEAR
Population of
continental
United States
INCREASE OVER PRECEDING
CENSUS
Percentage
of increase
with
Number
Per cent.
correction
for 1870
and 1880 '
I9IO
1900
1890
1880
1870
i860
1850
1840
1830
1820
1810
1800
1790
91,972,266
75,994,575
62,947,714
50,155,783
38,558,371
31,443,321
23,191,876
17,069,453
12,866,020
9,638,453
7,239,881
5,308,483
3,929,214
i5,977,<'9i
13,046,861
12,791,931
11,597,412
7,115,050
8,251,445
6,122,423
4,203,433
3,227,567
2,398,572
1,931,398
1,379,269
21 .0
20.7
25 -5
30.1
22.6
35-6
35-9
327
33-5
33 I
36.4
35 I
21 .0
20.7
24 9
26.0
26.6
35 ■^>
35-9
327
33-5
33 I
36.4
35-1
8. Among the 5 main divisions of continental United States the
highest rate of increase is found in the Western division and the lowest
in the North Central. . . .
10. In 1790 the northern and the southern groups of states had
almost equal populations, but through the following hundred years —
with an insignificant and probably only apparent exception in om
decade — the North steadily gained, until in 1890 its population was
almost double that of the South. . . .
11. In the decade of 1890 to 1900, on the contrary, for the first
time in our national history the Southern states increased faster than
the Northern, if allowance be made for the undercount in 1870. . . .
15. The region east of the Mississippi increased more rapidly from
1890 to 1900 than from 1880 to 1890, while that west of the Mississippi
increased in the later decade not much more than half as fast as in
the earlier.
' The evidence is clear that there was a marked deficiency in the enumeration
of the population in the southern states in 1870, resultinj; in an undcrstatemenl
of the increase from i860 to 1870 and an overstatement of the increase from 1870
to 1880. There is no means of ascertaining accurately the extent of the deficiency.
but an approximate estimate of the true population in 1870 was made in the census
report of 1890 (Population. Part I, pp. xi, xii, and xvi) by which the iK)pulati()ii
in 1870 was pbccd at 39,818,449 instead of 38,558,371. Using this figure th(
increase of 1870 over i860 would be 8,375,128, or 26.6 per cent, and the increasi
of 1880 over 1870, 10,337,334, or 26 per cent.
POPULATION AND LABOR 779
16. The increased growth of the East and the decreased growth
of the West may both be connected with a probable decline in the
current of westward migration. . . .
20. . . . The growth of population, an important index of pros-
perity, was more evenly distributed over the country between 1890
and 1900 than between 1880 and 1890. . . .
23. The most noteworthy result of the entire discussion is the
cumulative evidence of the rapid approach to equality in the rates
of increase of various parts of the United States. This appears
whether North be compared with South, East with West, or city with
country.
C. The Westward Movement, 1880 ^
The year 1880 has usually been said to have marked the passing of the American
frontier. By this is meant that there was now practically continuous settlement
from the Atlantic to the Pacific oceans, though it was still very sparse in the western
states. The effect of the railroads in promoting western settlement is indicated
in the following extract.
In tracing the history of the settlement of our country we are now
brought down to the latest census, that of 1880. During the decade
just past Colorado has been added to the sisterhood of states. The
first point that strikes us in examining the map showing the areas of
settlements at this date, as compared with previous ones, is the great
extent of territory which has been brought under occupation during
the past ten years. Not only has settlement spread westward over
large areas in Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, and Texas, thus moving the
frontier line of the main body of settlement westward many scores of
miles, but the isolated settlements of the Cordilleran region and of the
Pacific coast show enormous accessions of occupied territory. . . .
The most notable change in New England and the middle states,
including Ohio and Indiana, has been the increase in density of popu-
lation and the migration to cities, with the consequent increase of
the urban population. . . . Throughout the southern states there is
to be noted, not only a general increase in the density of population '
and a decrease of unsettled areas, but a greater approach to uniformity
of settlement throughout the whole region. ... In Wisconsin the un-
settled area is rapidly decreasing as railroads stretch their arms out
over the vacant tracts. In Minnesota and in eastern Dakota the build-
ing of railroads, and the development of the latent capabilities of this
region in the cultivation of wheat, have caused a rapid flow of settle-
^ Statistics of the Population of the United States at the Tenth Census. (Wash-
ington, 1883), I, xix-xx.
78o READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
ment, and now the frontier line of population, instead of returning
to Lake Michigan, as it did ten years ago, meets the boundary line of
the British possessions west of the 97th meridian. The settlements
in Kansas and Nebraska have made great strides over the plains,
reaching at several points the boundary of the humid region, so that
their westward extension beyond this point is to be governed here-
after by the supply of water in the streams. . . . Texas also has made
great strides, both in the extension of the frontier line of settlement
and in the increase in the density of population, due both to the build-
ing of railroads and to the development of the cattle, sheep, and
agricultural interests. The heavy population in the prairie portions
of the state is explained by the railroads which now traverse them. . . .
Of all the states and territories of the Cordilleran region Colorado
has made the greatest stride during the decade. From a narrow strip
of settlement, extending along the immediate base of the Rocky moun-
tains, the belt has increased so that it comprises the whole mountain
region, beside a great extension upon the plains. This increase is
the result of the discovery of very extensive and very rich mineral
deposits about Leadville, producing a ''stampede" second only to
that of '49 and '50 to California. . . .
The length of the frontier line in 1880 is 3,337 miles. The area
included between the frontier line, the Atlantic and the Gulf coast,
and the northern boundary is 1,398,945 square miles. . . .
The population is 50,155,783, and the average density of settle-
ment is 32 to the square mile.
D. Growth of Cities, iygo-1880 ^
The urban concentration of the population began on a considerable scale
about the middle of the nineteenth century, and has proceeded hand in hand
with the development of manufactures and of improved transportation facilities.
The growth of cities in the United States has formed a marked
feature of our social and industrial history. The following table
shows the number of cities of 8,000 inhabitants and over at each census,
beginning in 1790, and the aggregate urban population of the country
in comparison with the total population at corresponding periods:
From this table it appears that, speaking roundly, in 1790 one-
thirtieth of the population of the country was found in cities; in 1800,
one-twenty-fifth; in 1810, and again in 1820, one-twentieth; in 1830,
» Report on the Manufactures of the United States at the Tenth Census. (Wash
ington, 1883), II, xxii.
POPULATION AND LABOR
781
Date
Population of
United States
Number
of cities
Population of
cities
Inhabitants
of cities in
each 100 of
total popu-
lation
1 700. . . .
3,929,214
5,308,483
7,239,881
9,633,822
12,866,020
17,069,453
23,191,876
31,443,321
38,558,371
50,155,783
6
6
II
13
26
44
85
141
226
286
131,472
210,873
356,920
475,135
864,509
1,453,994
2,897,586
5,072,256
8,071,875
11,318,547
1800
3
3
4
4
6
8
12
16
20
22
6
1810
9
1820
9
9
7
5
5
I
9
5
1830
1840
1850
i860
1870
1880
one-fifteenth; in 1840, one- twelfth; in 1850, one-eighth; in i860,
one-sixth; in 1870, one-fifth; and in 1880, two-ninths.
It would be difficult to say in what proportion the growth of the
cities of the country, as a body, has been due to commercial, and in
what proportion to industrial forces, even had we official statistics
covering our internal traffic, which we have not; but I conceive that
no one will hesitate to assent to the proposition that the growth of
the cities of the United States since 1850 has been due in far greater
measure to their development as manufacturing centers than to their
increased business as centers for the distribution of commercial
products. . . .
E. Urban Concentration, 1880-IQ10 ^
One of the most striking phenomena in the movement of the population during
the last half century has been the increase in the urban and the relative decrease
in the rural population. This has been made possible by improvements in agri-
culture which have set free a large part of those formerly needed on the farms
and on the other hand by the growth of manufactures which have absorbed this
available labor.
The Census Bureau classifies as urban population that residing
in cities and other incorporated places of 2,500 inhabitants or more,
including New England towns of that population. . . .
Proportion urban and rural— The proportion of the total popula-
tion living in urban and in rural territory at the censuses of 1910,
1 Thirteenth Census of the United States, Taken in the Year 1910. Volume I:
Population (Washington, 1913), 53, 60.
782
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
1900, 1890, and 1880, respectively, for continental United States,
is shown in the following table:
CLASS
POPULATION OF CONTINENTAL UNITED STATES
I9IO
1900
1890
1880
Total
91,972,266
42,623,383
49,348,883
75,994,575
30,797,185
45,197,390
62,947,714
22,720,223
40,227,491
50,155,783
14,772,438
35,383,345
Urban
Rural
PER CENT DISTRIBUTION
Total
Urban
Rural
100. 0
46.3
53-7
lOO.O
40.5
59-5
100. 0
36.1
639
TOO.O
295
70.5
This table shows a steady and rapid increa,se in the proportion of
urban population. While the increase in the percentage of urban
population from 1900 to 1910 was appreciably greater than from
1890 to 1900, it was not so great as from 1880 to 1890. . . .
Increase in urban and rural population. — In order to compare the
rate of growth in urban and rural communities, it is necessary in each
case, as previously explained, to consider the changes in population
which have occurred in the same territory from one decennial census
to another. For this purpose communities are classed as urban or
rural according to their population in 19 10, and the population of
the places as thus classified is then determined for 1900 for purposes
of comparison.
The increase from 1900 to 19 10 in urban and rural population on
this basis is shown, for continental United States, in the following table:
POPULATION IN—
INCREASE, I9OO-I9IO
CLASS
1910
1900
Number
Per
cent.
Total {X)pulation
91,972,266
42,623,383
49.348,883
75,994,575
31,609,645
44,384.930
15,977,691
11,013,738
4,963,953
31. 0
Urban territory in 19 10
Rural territory in 1910
34. «
XI. 2
POPULATION AND LABOR 783
The rate of increase for the population of urban areas was over
three times that for the population living in rural territory.
II. Immigration
A. Immigration, 1882-igio ^
The exhaustion of available free land for settlement, together with the rapid
growth of the population, directed attention about 19 10 to the increase in unmi-
gration of the previous decade, and especially to the changing character of the
immigration. Accordingly a commission of nine persons was created to investi-
gate and report upon the subject. They made an exhaustive report in forty-two
volumes.
SOURCES or immigration and character of immigrants
From 1820 to June 30, 1910, 27,918,992 immigrants were admitted
to the United States. Of this number 92.3 per cent came from Euro-
pean countries,^ which countries are the source of about 93.7 per cent
of the present immigration movement. From 1820 to 1883 more
than 95 per cent of the total immigration from Europe originated in
the United Kingdom, Germany, Scandinavia, the Netherlands,
Belgium, France, and Switzerland. In what follows the movement
from these countries will be referred to as the "old immigration."
Following 1883 there was a rapid change in the ethnical character
of European immigration, and in recent years more than 70 per cent
of the movement has originated in southern and eastern Europe.
The change geographically, however, has been somewhat greater than
the change in the racial character of the immigration, this being due
very largely to the number of Germans who have come from Austria-
Hungary and Russia. The movement from southern and eastern
Europe will be referred to as the "new immigration." In a single
generation Austria-Hungary, Italy, and Russia have succeeded the
United Kingdom and Germany as the chief sources of immigration.
In fact, each of the three countries first named furnished more immi-
grants to the United States in 1907 than came in the same year from
the United Kingdom, Germany, Scandinavia, France, the Netherlands,
Belgium, and Switzerland combined.
The old immigration movement in recent years has rapidly de-
clined, both numerically and relatively, and under present conditions
there are no indications that it will materially increase. The new
^ Reports of the Immigration Commission. (Washington, 191 1), I, 23-6, 37-8,
42, 60, 139, 45-8.
2 Including Turkey in Asia.
784 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
immigration movement is very large, and there are few, if any, indi-
cations of its natural abatement. . . .
The old immigration movement was essentially one of permanent
settlers. The new immigration is very largely one of individual-
a considerable proportion of whom apparently have no intention of
permanently changing their residence, their only purpose in coming
to America being to temporarily take advantage of the greater wages
paid for industrial labor in this country. This, of course, is not true
of all the new immigrants, but the practice is sufficiently common to
warrant referring to it as a characteristic of them as a class. From
all data that are available it appears that nearly 40 per cent of the
new immigration movement returns to Europe and that about two-
thirds of those who go remain there. This does not mean that all of
these immigrants have acquired a competence and returned to live on
it. Among the immigrants who return permanently are those who
have failed, as well as those who have succeeded. Thousands of those
returning have, under unusual conditions of climate, work, and food,
contracted tuberculosis and other diseases; others are injured in our
industries; still others are the widows and children of aliens dying
here. These, with the aged and temperamentally unfit, make up a
large part of the aliens who return to their former homes to remain.
The old immigration came to the United States during a period
of general development and was an important factor in that develop-
ment, while the new immigration has come during a period of great
industrial expansion and has furnished a practically unlimited supply
of labor to that expansion.
CAUSES OF THE MOVEMENT
As a class the new immigrants are largely unskilled laborers com-
ing from countries where their highest wage is small compared with
the lowest wage in the United States. Nearly 75 per cent of them
are males. About 83 per cent are between the ages of 14 and,
45 years, and consequently are producers rather than dependents.]
They bring little money into the country and send or take a con-
siderable part of their earnings out. More than 35 per cent are!
illiterate, as compared with less than 3 per cent of the old immigrant]
class. Immigration prior to 1882 was practically unregulated, an<
consequently many were not self-supporting, so that the care of alie
paupers in several States was a serious problem. The new immi-
gration has for the most part been carefully regulated so far asj
health and likelihood of pauperism are concerned, and, although]
POPULATION AND LABOR
78s
drawn from classes low in the economic scale, the new immigrants
as a rule are the strongest, the most enterprising, and the best of
their class. . . .
Unlike Canada, Argentina, Brazil, Australia, and other immi-
grant-receiving countries, the United States makes no effort to
induce immigration. A law for the encouragement of immigration
by guaranteeing in this country labor contracts made abroad was
enacted in 1864 but repealed in 1868. Later legislation has tended
to prevent the introduction of contract laborers and assisted or in-
duced immigration, the purpose of the Government being that the
movement should be a natural one. The law respecting assisted
immigration, however, does not deny the right of a person already
in this country to send for an otherwise admissible relative or friend,
and a large part of the present movement, especially from southern
and eastern Europe, is made possible through such assistance. The
immediate incentive of the great bulk of present-day immigration *
is the letters of persons in this country to relatives or friends
at home. Comparatively few immigrants come without some
reasonably definite assurance that employment awaits them, and
it is probable that as a rule they know the nature of that em-
ployment and the rate of wages. A large number of immigrants
are induced to come by quasi labor agents in this country, who
combine the business of supplying laborers to large employers and
contractors with the so-called immigrant banking business and the
selling of steamship tickets.
Another important agency in promoting emigration from Europe
to the United States is the many thousands of stea«mship-ticket agents
and subagents operating in the emigrant-furnishing districts of south-
ern and eastern Europe. Under the terms of the United States
immigration law, as well as the laws of most European countries, the
promotion of emigration is forbidden, but nevertheless the steamship-
agent propaganda flourishes everywhere. It does not appear that the
steamship lines as a rule openly direct the operations of these agents,
but the existence of the propaganda is a matter of common knowledge
in the emigrant-furnishing countries and, it is fair to assume, is ac-
quiesced in, if not stimulated, by the steamship lines as well. With
the steamship lines the transportation of steerage passengers is purely
a commercial matter; moreover, the steerage business which origi-
nates in southern and eastern Europe is peculiarly attractive to the
companies, as many of the immigrants travel back and forth, thus
insuring east-bound as well as west-bound traffic. . . .
786 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
IMMIGRATION OF DISEASED ALIENS
Prior to 1882, when the federal Government first assumed control
of immigration, the movement was practically unregulated. No
process of selection was exercised among the immigrants who came
between 1819 and 1882, and as a result the diseased, defective, delin-
quent, and dependent entered the country practically at will. With
the development of federal immigration laws the situation in this
respect has entirely changed, and while, unfortunately, the present
law, from the difiiculty in securing proof, is largely ineffectual in pre-
venting the coming of criminals and other moral delinquents, it does
effectively debar paupers and the physically unsound and generally
the mentally unsound. . . .
IMMIGRANTS IN MANUFACTURING AND MINING
A large proportion of the southern and eastern European immi-
grants of the past twenty-five years have entered the manufacturing
and mining industries of the eastern and middle western States,
mostly in the capacity of unskilled laborers. There is no basic indus-
try in which they are not largely represented and in many cases they
compose more than 50 per cent of the total number of persons em-
ployed in such industries. Coincident with the advent of these
millions of unskilled laborers there has been an unprecedented expan-
sion of the industries in which they have been employed. Whether
this great immigration movement was caused by the industrial de-
velopment or whether the fact that a practically unlimited and avail-
able supply of cheap labor existed in Europe was taken advantage
of for the purpose of expanding the industries, can not well be demon-
strated. Whatever may be the truth in this regard it is certain that
southern and eastern European immigrants have almost completely
monopolized unskilled labor activities in many of the more imi)ortant
industries. This phase of the industrial situation was made the most
important and exhaustive feature of the Commission's investigation,
and the results show that while the competition of these immigrants
has had little, if any, effect on the highly skilled trades, nevertheless,
through lack of industrial progress and by reason of large and constant
reinforcement from abroad, it has kept conditions in the semiskilled
and unskilled occupations from advancing. . . .
ASSIMILATION OF IMMIGRANTS
It b difficult to define and still more difl^cult to correctly measure
the tendency of newer immigrant races toward Americanization,
POPULATION AND LABOR
787
or assimilation into the body of the American people. If, however,
the tendency to acquire citizenship, to learn the English language]
and to abandon native customs and standards of living may be con-
sidered as factors, it is found that many of the more recent immi-
grants are backward in this regard, while some others have made
excellent progress. The absence of family life, which is so con-
spicuous among many southern and eastern Europeans in the United
States, is undoubtedly the influence which most effectively retards
assimilation. The great majority of some of these races are repre-
sented in the United States by single men or men whose wives and
families are in their native country. It is a common practice for men
of this class in industrial communities to live in boarding or rooming
groups, and as they are also usually associated with each other in their
work they do not come in contact with Americans, and consequently
have little or no incentive to learn the English language, become
acquainted with American institutions, or adopt American standards.
In the case of families, however, the process of assimilation is usually
much more rapid. The families as a rule live in much more whole-
some surroundings, and are reached by more of the agencies which
promote assimilation. The most potent influence in promoting the
assimilation of the family is the children, who, through contact with
American life in the schools, almost invariably act as the unconscious
agents in the uplift of their parents. Moreover, as the children
grow older and become wage earners, they usually enter some higher
occupation than that of their fathers, and in such cases the Ameri-
canizing influence upon their parents continues until frequently the
whole family is gradually led away from the old surroundings and old
standards into those more nearly American. This influence of the
children is potent among immigrants in the great cities, as well as in
the smaller industrial centers. ...
COUNTRY OF ORIGIN, 1820 TO 191O
With respect to origin of the immigration to the United States
a remarkable change has taken place. More than 70 per cent
of the present immigration is from the south and east of Europe
and only about 20 per cent is from the north and west of Europe.
Two decades ago more than 70 per cent was from the north and
west of Europe and less than 20 per cent from the south and east
of Europe. . . .
For the period from 1820 to 1910, 92.3 per cent of the immigrants
for whom country of origin was reported came from Europe, 58 per
788
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
cent being from the north and west of Europe, and 34.2 per cent
from the south and east of Europe.^ Only a very small proportion of
the immigrants came from the south and east of Europe until in the
late eighties. The proportion from that section of Europe reached
25 per cent for the first time in 1887. A notable shifting of the source
of immigration took place between 1895 and 1896. In 1895, 54.7 per
cent of the immigrants came from the north and west of Europe and
43.2 per cent from the south and east of Europe. In 1896, only 40
per cent came from the north and west of Europe and 57 per cent
came from the south and east of Europe. . . .
CONCENTRATION IN CITIES
In 1900 the 10,341,276 foreign-born residing in continental United
States were distributed by class of place of residence as indicated in
the following table:
Table 14. — Per cent distribution of native- and foreign-horn population
nental United States, by class of place of residence: igoo
of conti-
Class of place of residence
Native-
born
Foreign-
born
Total
100. 0
100 0
Cities of 2,500 or over
36.1
66.3
100,000 or over
15s
6.7
6.6
4-4
2.9
63 9
388
10.8
25,000 to 100,000
8,000 to 25,000
9.2
4.6
2.9
4,000 to 8,000
2,500 to 4,000
Smaller cities and country districts. . .
33-7
The preceding table shows clearly that the foreign-born popula-
tion of continental United States is concentrated in cities to a much
greater degree than the native population. Of the total foreign-born
population, 66.3 per cent reside in cities having a population of at
least 2,500, but only 36.1 per cent of the native poj^ulation are so
classed. The larger the cities, the greater the disparity between the
percentages of foreign-born population and of native population
residing in such cities. . . .
* Including Turkey in Asia.
POPULATION AND LABOR 789
As a result of the investigation the Commission is unanimously
of the opinion that in framing legislation emphasis should be laid
upon the following principles:
1. While the American people, as in the past, welcome the
oppressed of other lands, care should be taken that immigration be
such both in quality and quantity as not to make too difficult the
process of assimilation.
2. Since the existing law and further special legislation recom-
mended in this report deal with the physically and morally unfit,
further general legislation concerning the admission of ahens should
be based primarily upon economic or business considerations touching
the prosperity and economic well-being of our people.
3. The measure of the rational, healthy development of a country
is not the extent of its investment of capital, its output of products,
or its exports and imports, unless there is a corresponding economic
opportunity afforded to the citizen dependent upon employment for
his material, mental, and moral development.
4. The development of business may be brought about by means
which lower the standard of living of the wage earners. A slow
expansion of industry which would permit the adaptation and assim-
ilation of the incoming labor supply is preferable to a very rapid indus-
trial expansion which results in the immigration of laborers of low
standards and efficiency, who imperil the American standard of wages
and conditions of employment.
The Commission agrees that laws should be passed:
1. To protect the United States more effectively against the immi-
gration of criminal and certain other debarred classes. . . .
2. Sufficient appropriation should be regularly made to enforce
vigorously the provisions of the laws previously recommended by the
Commission and enacted by Congress regarding the importation of
women for immoral purposes. . . .
4. To strengthen the certainty of just and humane decisions of
doubtful cases at ports of entry it is recommended — ...
5. To protect the immigrant against exploitation; to discourage
sending savings abroad; to encourage permanent residence and
naturalization; and to secure better distribution of alien immigrants
throughout the country — . . .
7. The general policy adopted by Congress in 1882 of excluding
Chinese laborers should be continued. . . .
8. The investigations of the Commission show an oversupply of
unskilled labor in basic industries to an extent which indicates an
790 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
oversupply of unskilled labor in the industries of the country as a
whole, a condition which demands legislation restricting the further
admission of such unskilled labor. . . .
The following methods of restricting immigration have been
suggested:
(a) The exclusion of those unable to read or write in some language.
(b) The limitation of the number of each race arriving each year
to a certain percentage of the average of that race arriving during
a given period of years.
(c) The exclusion of unskilled laborers unaccompanied by wives
or families.
(d) The limitation of the number of immigrants arriving annuall\-
at any port.
(e) The material increase in the amount of money required to
be in the possession of the immigrant at the port of arrival.
(/) The material increase of the head tax.
(g) The levy of the head tax so as to make a marked discrimina-
tion in favor of men with families.
All these methods would be effective in one way or another in
securing restrictions in a greater or less degree. A majority of the
Commission favor the reading and writing test as the most feasible
single method of restricting undesirable immigration.
The Commission as a whole recommends restriction as demanded
by economic, moral, and social considerations, furnishes in its report
feasons for such restriction, and points out methods by which Congrc-
can attain the desired result if its judgment coincides with that of the
Commission.
B. Immigration Legislation, 1882-igio *
In addition to the general legislation concerning immigration, which is hen-
described, the immigration of Chinese labor into this country has been prohibited.
An attempt has been made three times — the last in 1914 — to impose an educa-
tional restriction upon immigration, but it has failed each time to become law.
. . . On August 3, 1882, the first general immigration law was
approved.^ This law provided that a head tax of 50 cents should
be levied on all aliens landed at United States ports, the money thus
collected to be used to defray the ex])enses of regulating immigration
and for the care of immigrants after landing. . . . The law provided
that foreign convicts (except those convicted of i)c)litical olTenscs),
* Reports of the Immigration Commission. (Washington, 191 1), 11, 569-77.
« x8 Stot., pt. 5, p. 477.
POPULATION AND LABOR 791
lunatics, idiots, and persons likely to become public charges, should
not be permitted to land.
On February 26, 1885, the first law forbidding the importation of
contract labor was approved. ^ This law was defective, in that no
inspection was provided for, nor was any arrangement made for the
general execution of the provisions of the law or for the deportation
of the contract laborer himself. This law was amended by the act
of February 23, 1887. . . .
The immigration law of 1891 provided for a head tax of 50 cents,
as was also provided in the law of 1882, the head tax being considered
merely as a means of raising money for the proper administration
of the law. Persons suffering from a loathsome or a dangerous
contagious disease, and polygamists, were added to the classes ex-
cluded by the act of 1882, and it was also provided that "assisted
persons, unless affirmatively shown that they did not belong to any
excluded class," should be debarred. The contract-labor law was
strengthened by prohibiting the encouragement of immigration by
promises of employment through advertisements published in any
foreign country, and transportation companies were forbidden to
solicit or encourage immigration. . . . Another provision not found
in the law of 1882 was that which allowed the return within a year
after arrival of any alien who had come into the United States in
violation of law, such return being at the expense of the transporta-
tion company or person bringing such alien into the country. . . .
With the exception of an amendment to an appropriation act in
1894 raising the head tax on immigrants from 50 cents to $1,^ no
immigration legislation was enacted until 1903. The agitation of
the subject in Congress continued, however, and the period is inter-
esting chiefly because of the adoption by both houses of Congress
of a bill providing for an educational test for immigrants and the
veto of the bill by President Cleveland.
As the bill went to the President it provided that persons physi-
cally capable and over 16 years of age who could not read and
write the English language or some other language, parents, grand-
parents, wives, and minor children of admissible immigrants being
excepted, were added to the excluded classes.
President Cleveland returned the bill with his veto on March
2, 1897. He objected to the radical departure from the previous
1 23 Stat., p. 332.
2 This was raised to $4 by the act of February 20, 1907. — Ed.
792 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
national policy relating to immigration, which welcomed all who
came, the success of which policy was attested by the last century'
great growth. . . .
By the act of March 26, 19 10, sections 2 and 3 of the immigration
law of February 20, 1907, were amended to more effectively prevent
the importation of women and girls for immoral purposes. . . .
III. Labor Conditions
A. General Conditions of Labor, igoo ^
In the reports of the Industrial Commission there are brought together the
diverse and often conflicting views of employers, laborers, and students of the
labor problem. In the following brief digest of some of the testimony taken b\-
the Commission there is thus presented a symposium on the subject. Almost
half of the nineteen volumes of their reports are devoted to the question of
labor.
All the witnesses who spoke of the general condition of the working
class as compared with what it was 20 or 30 or 50 years ago,
agreed that it has improved. Money wages have increased, and the
cost of particular commodities has, in general, diminished. Thr
standard of life has accordingly risen. One witness notes, however,
that the acquirement of some things which were luxuries in former
years has been accompanied with the loss, in "city communities, of
wholesome things, such as chickens and good meat, pure milk and
butter, which every workingman was able to have in the smaller
communities of earlier times. ^
Whether the conditions of the working people had improved
within a shorter period, such as ten years, is not a matter of such
general agreement. One witness, testifying in the spring of 1900,
thought that though wages in the strongly organized trades were
fully as high as they were ten years earlier, wages in the trades which
were not firmly organized when the hard times came on were probabl\-
10 per cent lower than before the panic of 1893. He thought that
this was true in spite of some increase of wages, amounting to perhaj)>
8 per cent in his own city of Indianapolis, within the two years
preceding his testimony. Mr. Wright, United States Commissioner
of Labor, testifying at the end of 1898, declared that wages had
* Reports of the Industrial Commission. (Washington, 1900), XIV, xliii-lxxv,
passim.
' Vol. VII: McNeill, 117; De Graflfenried, 321, 322; Gompers, 615, 645, 654;
Young, 696-698; Kennedy, 751, 752.
POPULATION AND LABOR 793
constantly decreased since 1893, though within two or three years
there had been a slight reaction in factory employments.^
One or two witnesses, comparing the condition of working people
in the United States and in European countries, think that the differ-
ence is less than it is popularly thought to be. One even holds that,
in view of the comparative advantages of the two countries, the
advancement in skill and enterprise, and the standards from which
each started, the working classes of England are to be considered
fully as well off as those of the United States. In confirmation of
this he says that there is but little immigration from England to the
United States, and that many who have come have returned. Mr.
Willoughby, of the United States Department of Labor, while con-
sidering that the conditions of labor are undoubtedly better here,
upon the whole, than in any European country, thinks that the coal
miners are better off in Europe than in the United States, and that
the British workmen in the steel trade, while not getting as high wages
as ours, have more constant work and are better taken care of through
various relief organizations. European workmen in general have
more certain conditions of life. The German workman has the
consciousness of protection against the pecuniary results of accident,
sickness, old age, and death, through insurance provided by the
state.2
The differences which exist between European .countries and
America, in the condition of the working class, are attributed to
various causes. The chief are the great domain of rich soil which we
have had at our disposal ; the climatic conditions, which require better
food and clothing and housing, and have helped to lead the workman
to demand wages which will buy these things; the greater activity
and productivity, which are believed to result both from the climatic
conditions directly and from the more adequate nourishment; and
the fact that the working people of Europe have emerged from a
condition of serfdom to which the workers of America, except the
negroes, were never subjected. The negroes of the South, it is
declared, are in a position more like that of European workmen.* ^
Several manufacturers refer to the superior energy and productive
power of the American workman. To this the possibility of cheap
1 Vol. VII: Kennedy, 73O, 754, 755; Wright, 15.
2 Vol VII: Gompers, 646, 647; Schonfarber, 448, 449. Vol. XIV: WU-
loughby, 179, 180.
3 Vol. VII: Gompers, 646, 647.
794 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
production in the United States is attributed. It is declared that
foreign workmen become more efficient, in a marked degree, after
they have been a short time in this country. One manufacturer of
worsted and woolen goods, however, thinks that the English working
people in his line do better work than the American. This, he thinks,
is because the English masters are able, on account of the surplus
of good labor, to be more exacting and to require more careful
work.^ . . .
Hours of labor. — A universal desire is expressed, on the part of
witnesses representing labor interests, for a lessening of the hours
of work. Eight hours is named by the majority of witnesses as the
limit which ought not to be exceeded. Several, including the presi-
dent of the Cigar Makers' International Union, the secretary of the
Boot and Shoe Workers' Union, and a representative of the Brick-
layers' Union, think that six hours a day, at least in their own trades,
would be enough. Mr. Gompers, president of the Federation of
Labor, refers particularly to farm labor, and believes that it, as well
as labor in other fields, might be and ought to be brought within an
8-hour limit. He points out that employers in several lines, who
have said that the day of 8 hours, or even 9 or lo hours, was
impracticable in their particular occupations, have found that it
could be made practicable when organized labor forced it upon
them.2
Two great lines of argument are advanced in support of the desire
for the shorter workday. One is the effect upon the physical, mental,
and moral well-being of the workman. It is declared that greater
leisure results in a lessening of dissipation and in moral and intel-
lectual elevation, as well as in physical betterment. The second lini
of argument relates to industrial conditions. It is stated that thi
product per hour is increased as the day's work is shortened, and
Mr. Gompers and Mr. Strasser, formerly president of the Cigar
Makers' International Union, are confident that there is no diminu-
tion of the product per day. Several witnesses mention specific in-
stances in which hours have been abridged without lessening output.
Mr. Gompers and Mr. Strasser are apparently not of opinion, however,
that the same man with the same appliances will generally produce
as much in 8 hours as in 9 or 10. Their proposition is that increased
* Vol. XIV: Steel, 237; Harrah, 354, 355; Weidmann, 704.
• Vol. VII: Spx)hn, 145; Perkins, 174, 179; Eaton, 366, 372; Gompers, 649.
650.
POPULATION AND LABOR 795
leisure causes increased opportunity for thought and improve-
ment, and that thought and improvement give rise, on the one
hand, to new tools and inventions, and, on the other hand, to new
desires, which give opportunities for the use of the new machines.
Mr. Gompers also holds that under existing conditions the lessening
of hours is necessary to prevent the throwing of large numbers of
men out of work by improvements in machinery and processes. He
is confident, however, that there is not, upon the whole, any real
advantage to the employers in long hours. The Southern textile
factories have advantages in the nearness of raw material and the
cheapness of labor, but their long day is not in itself an advantage.^
Many workingmen hold that the lessening of hours is likely to
raise wages rather than to lower them. . . .
LABOR ORGANIZATIONS
Membership and growth. — The testimony shows clearly that indus-
trial prosperity is favorable to the growth of labor organizations.
From 1892 to 1897 the membership of those in New York State de-
creased 100,000. From March 31, 1897, to June 30, 1900, a compara-
tively prosperous time, there was an increase of more than a hundred
thousand. The growth is said to have been chiefly outside the city
of New York. The city has been for some time pretty thoroughly
organized. The commissioner of labor statistics of New York, testi-
fying in September, 1900, thought that the organizations included
75 per cent of the workers at mechanical trades in the State,
and perhaps one-eighth of all wage earners. Of Indiana it was
stated in May, 1900, that the unions were stronger than five years
earlier, but not quite as strong as ten years earlier. The old unions
maintained their wages and hours and their organization through
the hard times; but the new organizations lost members, and many
disappeared.^
Attitude of employers.— Several witnesses agree in stating that the
attitude of employers toward the unions is, on the whole, growing
more favorable. Mr. Wright, United States Commissioner of Labor,
says that employers are glad to have the cooperation of unions if they
are directed by men of business experience and integrity, as the
typographical union and the glass blowers' unions are.
1 Vol. VII: Bullock, 521,522; Strasser, 267; Gompers, 627, 650-652; Kennedy,
645-
2 Vol. VII: McMackin, 799-801, 807; Kennedy, 739.
796 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
Yet it is pointed out that the favorable change of attitude does
not appear everywhere.^
Mr. Brooks declares that the growth of socialism in such New
England towns as Brockton and Haverhill results from the feeling
of the workingmen that their trade organizations can effect nothing.
If manufacturers want to make socialists in this country they have
only to "smash the unions." ^ . . .
Necessity of strikes. — There is little dissent from the opinion that
strikes are a necessary weapon of the workingman under existing
social conditions. Mr. Gompers, president of the American Federa-
tion of Labor, does not believe that strikes can be entirely eliminated
from our system of society, though he seems to hope that by a thor-
ough organization of both the workers and the employers it will be
possible, in a great measure, to secure their beneficent results with-
out interrupting industry and commerce. He says, however, that
every labor organization ought to accumulate a defense fund. Em-
ployers who know that their men have a defense fund which will
enable them to resist will not lightly try to reduce wages, increase the
hours of labor, or enforce obnoxious conditions. Labor organizations
which have small funds or none are obliged to yield to deductions of
wages when industrial depression comes, and when business revives
they are the last to receive any of the benefits. He holds adequate
preparation for strikes to be the best means of preventing them. No
matter how just a cause is, unless it is backed up with power it will
be crushed. Disputes are determined by contest and conquest,
except when there is like power on both sides; then they are deter-
mined by reason. The same view is expressed by Bishop Potter. Hr
says that the employers are likely to contend against increase of wagr
or shortening of work days until they realize that the employees ha\^
force enough to meet them in a contest. Bishop Potter regards thr
strike as a reversion to barbarism, but considers that it is necessar\
under present conditions, just as war is necessary.'*^ . . .
Compulsory arbitration. — A considerable number of witnessi
favor a general application of compulsory arbitration in labor dii
ferences. It is strongly advocated by two who are strenuousl\
opposed to trade unions, and who seem to view it as a means >
1 Vol. VII: Wright, i6. Vol. XIV: McCormack, 50, 60; Fox. 14Q; O'Brien.
431-
« Vol. XIV: Brooks, 140-142.
» Vol. VII: Gompers, 598, S99i 607, 609. Vol. XIV: Potter, 11.
POPULATION AND LABOR 797
repressing their activity. One of them says, in terms, that he would
not have labor organizations recognized as such by law or by the
arbitration board. Some representatives of the unions, however
are also in favor of compulsory arbitration, and seem to view it as a
means of securing the public investigation of the actions of
employers.^ . . .
A very large number of witnesses, however, are absolutely opposed
to compulsory arbitration under any circumstances. It is argued
that to compel men to work on terms which they are not willing to
accept is slavery, and that to compel employers to run their works
and pay wages they are not willing to pay is confiscation. Several
representatives of the workmen add that the action of any govern-
mental body, such as a court of arbitration, would probably be hostile
to the men, as the action of the courts usually is.^ . . .
I- Arbitration and conciliation by State boards. — A considerable num-
ber of States have provided by statute for State boards, whose duty
is the settlement of labor disputes. These boards have not been
active, however, except in some half dozen States. Those of New
York and Massachusetts have been especially prominent, though
the boards of New Jersey, Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois have also done
active work.
Very little seems to have been accomplished in the way of actual
arbitration. Neither the employers nor the workingmen seem to be
generally desirous of arbitration by the State boards. . . .
Trade negotiations and agreements. — There is an almost universal
agreement that direct negotiations between the parties are the best
means of settling differences when such negotiations can be brought
about. If an agreement can not be reached in this way, the next
best thing is generally considered to be a board of arbitration, chosen
by the parties themselves from among employers and employees in
the same industry, but unconnected with the existing dispute. This
plan offers the great advantage of providing judges familiar with
the technical matters to be brought before them, as well as judges
personally satisfactory to the disputants. If such a board can not
reach an agreement, an outside umpire may be called in, and if the
appointment of such a board is not found practicable the whole de-
cision may sometimes be committed with advantage to persons un-
1 Vol. VII: Sherman, 378-380; Thompson, 757-763, 772-7741 Coffin, 778,
784,788,791; Kelley, 973, 974- Vol. XIV: Brooks, 142.
2 Vol. VII: Wright, 11, 12; Strasser, 262; Schaffer, 388, 389; Gompers, 612,
613; Walcott, 910, 911.
798 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
connected with the trade. Bishop Potter speaks of the board of
mediation and conciliation of New York City, a voluntary organiza
tion established by him and several other persons interested in the
betterment of social conditions. This board is declared to have
won the confidence of the working men and to have been of material
assistance in the settlement of several trade disputes.^
In several trades, as the steel industry and stove founding, wages,
hours, and other conditions of employment are fixed by agreement,
either annually or at other intervals, between associations of t\u
employers and of the employees. The witnesses who have partici-
pated in such agreements, as well as others who refer to them, regard
this plan as most beneficial wherever it can be brought about. . . .
B. National Labor Organizations, igoi ^
The two most successful and important attempts to unite all workers in u
single labor organization are here described.
As an association of wage-earners, the trade union began to be
possible only when a distinct wage-earning class arose. So long as
hand workers were in large part men who wrought their own material -
or the materials of their customers with their own tools, no wage-
earning class, such as we know, existed. . . .
Two important attempts have been made in the United State-
to go beyond the national organization of a trade or an industr\ .
and to bring all the wage-earners of the country under a single juris-
diction. The first was that of the Knights of Labor. This organiza-
tion was formed in 1869. It maintained a relatively quiet existence,
growing steadily but moderately, until about 1885. At that tinn
events brought it very prominently before the public eye, and il>
membership rose in a year's time from !lbout one hundred thousand
to six or seven hundred thousand. It was disastrously defeated in
some contests with employers, and sank into comparative obscurity
almost as rapidly as it had risen.
The fundamental idea of the Knights of Labor is the unity o\
all workers. Its characteristic motto is, "An injury to one is tht
concern of all." It regards this unity of interest as necessitalin.i^
unity of policy and of control; it conceives that unity of control can
» Vol. VII: Garland, 87, g7; McNeill, 117; liishop, 478; Gilbert, 875. Vol
XIV: Potter, 1,2; Leake, 279, 287.
• Pinal Report of the Industrial Commission. (\V:i>;liIiuM.»n \i^nA. XTX
'/93» 798-9. 806.
POPULATION AND LABOR 799
be effected only by concentrating all responsibility and power in the
hands of the men who may be chosen to stand at the head of affairs.
The control of the organization rests wholly in the general assembly,
and except when the general assembly is in session the orders of the
executive officers, elected by the general assembly, are required to
be obeyed by all members. While the several trades are separately
organized within the order, so far as this is practicable, every such
separate trade organization is subject to the control of the general
officers. ...
The second great effort to unite the wage-earners in a single organ-
ization is that of the American Federation of Labor. The Federation
differs from the Knights in that it tries to make itself distinctly an
organization of wage-earners, while the Knights desired to include
all productive workers, whether or not they received their compensa-
tion in the form of wages. More important, perhaps, it differs also
in its form of organization, and in the ideas of policy which lie at the
basis of the form of organization. The Knights of Labor may be
compared to the "republic, one and indivisible," which was the ideal
of the revolutionary statesmen of France. The Federation is based
on that principle of alliance, and union for certain purposes, of inde-
pendent minor republics, upon which the union of the American States
proceeded. Each trade is independently organized, not, it is con-
ceived, by virtue of any authority emanating from the head of the
whole, but by its own independent power. Each trade organization
retains its sovereign control of its internal affairs, and only joins with
the others in a federal organization for the consideration of common
interests and the promotion of the common good. The American
Federation of Labor now includes an overwhelming majority of the
organized workers of America. The strongest of the railroad brother-
hoods — the engineers, the firemen, the conductors, and the trainmen
— remain outside of it, and so do a few other important organ-
izations. With the exception, however, of the four great railroad
brotherhoods referred to, it is not improbable that the majority of
the members of labor organizations outside the Federation are in
the local unions which have no direct affiliation with any other body,
excepting, perhaps, the central labor unions or trades assemblies of
their cities. . . .
The union has two general methods of bettering the economic
condition of its members. It may try to strengthen the strategic
position of the individual workman in dealing with the employer, or
it may take the function of bargaining altogether out of the hands
8oo READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
of the individual. The former policy involves an attempt to dimin-
ish the number of competitors in the trade. The latter has no nece
sary reference to the number of individual workers, but involves tli
placing of the interests of all the workers under a single control, >
that the whole amount of labor power available in the trade may be
handled in the market as a unit. . . .
C. Membership of Trade Unions in the United States^ igoi
As no official statistics of the membership of trade unions are gathered, all
statements of their numbers are at best estimates, but the one given here is a ver>
careful one. In general about ten per cent of the men at work along industrial
lines belong to trade unions.
The following table gives a rough estimate of the aggregate mem-
bership of the labor organizations of the United States on July i,
1901:
Estimaled membership of labor organizations in the United States on July i, igoi
Unions affiliated with the American Federation of Labor .... 950,000 *
Custom-clothing makers 3,800
Lithographers 2,100 ■
Bricklayers 39,ooo •
Plasterers 7,000
Stonecutters 10,000
Box makers 5 ,500
Piano workers 7, 700
Engineers, marine 6,000
Engineers, locomotive 37,ooo
Firemen, locomotive 39.000
Conductors, railway 25.800
Trainmen, railroad 46,000
Switchmen 15,000
Letter carriers 15,000
Knights of labor and enumerated organizations, say 101,100
Total 1 ,400,000
D. Membership of American Federation of Labor ^ i8gy-igij *
Most of the labor organizations in the United States arc united in a fedcr,
body known as the American Federation of Labor, so that the growth in mcmbc r
ship of this organization reflects fairly accurately the growth of trade unionism
in the country. As some very strong unions are not affiliated with this body, the
total membership of all trade unions is somewhat greater than these figures indicate.
' Reports of the Industrial Commission. (Washington. 1901), XVII, xix.
' Report of Proceedings of the Thirty-third Annua! Convention of the American
Federation of Labor. (Washington, 1913). 4i . " 1-2-
POPULATION AND LABOR 8oi
The average paid-up and reported membership for the year is
1,996,004, an increase of 225,859 members over last year.
The following is the average membership reported or paid upon
for the past sixteen years:
Year Membership Year Membership
'I'^l ^64,825 1905 1,494,300
1898 278,016 1906 1,454,200
^899 349,422 1907 1,538,970
1900 548,321 1908 1,586,885
1901 787,537 1909 1,482,872
1902 1,024,399 1910 1,562,112
1903 1,465,800 1911 1,761,835
1904 1,676,200 1912 1,770,145
1913 1,996,004
. . . This report like all the other annual reports of the officers
and representatives of the American Federation of Labor brings out
forcibly the continuity of the organized trade union movement. It
is not a series of spasmodic, unrelated efforts to improve the condi-
tion of the workers, but it is a consistent, logically developed plan
based upon certain unchanging, fundamental principles. Each con-
vention is constantly referring back to the work of previous conven-
tions; during the year, the Executive Council takes up the work,
follows out the directions of the conventions, and works out new
problems upon lines in harmony with the declarations of purposes
and principles enunciated by previous conventions. . . .
The trade union movement of America is founded upon funda-
mental principles of human freedom and liberty. Whatever new
problems have arisen, whatever complications of old problems or of
new and old problems, they have always been solved by some method
that harmonized with the purposes of the movement — the effort
to insure to each individual the right to self-development, inde-
pendence and freedom. Like some masterpiece of music is this
movement of the toilers, though there is difference and variety, though
there is changing mood and feeling to interpret the developing theme,
yet through it, all pervading, is an exquisite tone of harmony that
gives the sense of unity and purposefulness. . . .
E. Labor Legislation, igoj ^
The main lines of labor legislation of a protective character are here described
as they existed at the end of 1903. A considerable advance has been made since
then, especially in more constructive social legislation.
1 Labor Legislation in the United States. By G. A. Weber. Bulletin of the
Bureau of Labor, No. 54, September, 1904 (Washington, 1904), i42i-i444» passim.
8o2 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
In considering the labor legislation enacted in the various States
it must be remembered that in States in which manufacturing and
mining industries prevail, such as New York, Pennsylvania, Massa-
chusetts, Illinois, Ohio, Connecticut, etc., there is more occasion for
the enactment of such legislation than in States where industries are
mostly agricultural, as in the South and West. . . .
Laws for the regulation of labor in factories, workshops, mer-
cantile establishments, sweat shops, bakeries, laundries, and on
building-construction work have been enacted in the various States
for the purpose of protecting the health and safety of employees
(see chart). For the proper enforcement of these regulations many
of the States have made provision for inspection services.
In 27 States the laws provide for the appointment of inspectors
of factories and workshops, whose duties consist of visiting and in-
specting factories, workshops, mills, and, in some cases, mercantile
establishments, sweat shops, bakeries, laundries, and building-con-
struction work, and enforcing the laws concerning the same. . . .
What are usually known as factory acts relate to (i) the pro-
tection of the health of employees, such as regulations requiring the
proper ventilation, lighting, and heating of factories and workshops,
the provision of exhaust fans to prevent dust or other deleterious
products from being inhaled by the operatives, the lime washing or
painting of walls, the provision of seats and separate toilet facilitit
for females, and the prohibition of overcrowding; (2) the prevention
of accidents, such as regulations prohibiting the employment of women
and children to clean machinery in motion or operate dangerous
machinery or of children to run elevators, requiring that machinery
and vats combining molten metal or hot liquids be properly guarded,
that mechanical belt and gearing shifters, means of communication
between the engineer's room and rooms where machinery is used, and
safety appliances on elevators be provided, that hoistway openin^^s
be properly railed off, that sides or railings be placed on stairways
that special precautions be taken in cases of dangerous or injuriou
occupations, or where explosive or highly inflammable compound
-o-e handled, that fire escapes be provided, and that doors in factorit'^
and workshops be so hung as to open outward, and that they br
kept unlocked; and (3) the conditions of employment of women and
children, such as regulations restricting the hours of labor
prohibiting night work, and requiring intervals of rest during th<
working day. . . .
Mine-labor legislation is necessarily confined to States and Terri
POPULATION AND LABOR 803
tories which produce coal or other minerals in sufficient quantities
to justify the enactment of special laws for the protection and
safety of persons employed in the mines. Thirty-four States and
Territories and the Federal Government have enacted laws of this
character. The Federal statute applies to the organized and un-
organized Territories having coal mines in operation
The provisions for the regulation of mines are quite similar in the
leading mining States, the difference being mainly in the extent to
which regulation is undertaken. They may be grouped into the
following classes, namely: Provisions of law (i) concerning employ-
ment in mines; (2) insuring the health and safety of mine employees;
(3) making special regulations for mines generating fire damp or
other explosive gases; (4) protecting the rights of miners by regulat-
ing the manner of weighing or measuring the quantity of coal
mined. . . .
The railway labor laws enacted by the various States and by the
Federal Government (see chart) have, with few exceptions, the object
of protecting the health and safety and the rights of employees,
and of reducing to a minimum the Uability of the traveling public to
accidents and inconvenience on account of acts of employees. They
may be considered under five groups, namely: Laws (i) regulating
the employment of certain classes of persons, (2) prohibiting certain
acts of railway employees, (3) protecting the rights of railway em-
ployees, (4) requiring certain mechanical equipment on railways for
the protection of the health and safety of employees, (5) concerning
the reporting and investigating of accidents to employees. . . .
Hours of Labor. — The statutes relating to hours of labor (see
chart) that have been enacted in the various States may be considered
under five groups, namely: (i) General laws which merely fix what
shall be regarded as a day's labor in the absence of contract; (2)
laws defining what shall constitute a day's work on public roads;
(3) laws limiting the hours of labor per day on public works generally;
(4) laws which limit the hours of labor in certain occupations; (5)
laws which specify the hours per day or per week during which women
and children may be employed. The statutes considered in the first
four groups relate to employees regardless of age or sex. . . .
The following 10 States have passed laws declaring that eight
hours shall be regarded a legal day's work unless otherwise agreed:
California, Connecticut, Illinois, Indiana, Missouri, Montana, New
York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin. The following 7 States
fix the legal working-day at 10 hours: Florida, Maine, Michigan,
8o4 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
Minnesota, Nebraska, New Hampshire, and Rhode Island. In
New Jersey a week's work is defined as consisting of 55 hours. . . .
All States and Territories except Arizona, California, Idaho,
Nevada, and the Philippine Islands have laws prohibiting the emplo\
ment of labor on Sundays. In California, however, it is a misde-
meanor for any employer to cause his employees to work more than
six days in seven except in cases of emergency. . . .
Much of the legislation enacted for the protection of women
employees (see chart) is similar to that for child labor. In man\
cases the same provision of law applies to both women and children.
This is especially true in the case of legislation concerning hours of
labor and employment in mines and barrooms. The existing statute
concerning female labor may be grouped as follows: (i) Statute
prohibiting the employment of women in certain occupations, a
in mines, underground workings, and smelting and refining works, in
barrooms, and in operating dangerous machinery or cleaning ma-
chinery while in motion; (2) statutes limiting the hours of labor;
(3) statutes prohibiting or restricting night work; (4) statutes re
quiring seats for female employees; (5) statutes requiring separai
toilet facilities for female employees; (6) legislation not included in
the above groups. ...
In 18 States and i Territory a limitation has been placed upon
the number of hours per day or per week that women may work in
manufacturing, mechanical, or mercantile establishments. In nearl\-
all of these States the same provisions which relate to women appl\
also to children. . . .
Five States prohibit the employment of women at night. . . .
Thirty-one States and the District of Columbia have laws r(
quiring employers to provide seats for the use of female cmployei
when they are not actively engaged in their duties. . . .
Seventeen States and the District of Columbia have laws re([uiiiii /
employers to provide toilet facilities for the separate use of femaK
when employed. . . .
Legislation relating to child labor is so varied in character in tin
different States and Territories that it is difficult to classify it sati-
factorily. For the purpose of the present outline it has been mo-
convenient to consider child-labor legislation under the followin
groups: (i) Statutes fixing an absolute age limit for the employmeni
of children in all gainful occupations or in one or more of the principa'
groups of industries; (2) statutes prohil)iting the employment <
children of school age or of illiterate children during school time <
POPULATION AND LABOR 805
unless they have complied with certain educational requirements-
(3) statutes prohibiting the employment of children in dangerous'
injurious, or immoral occupations, such as seUing or handling in-
toxicating liquors, or as rope or wire walkers, gymnasts, contortion-
ists, street singers or musicians, mendicants, itinerant peddlers, etc.;
(4) statutes prohibiting certain dangerous operations, such as running
elevators, cleaning machinery in motion, or operating dangerous
machinery, etc.; (5) statutes restricting the hours of labor or prohib-
iting night work on the part of children; (6) legislation not included
in the above groups.
The age limit prescribed by law in the different States, under
which employment is absolutely prohibited, is either 16, 14, 13, 12,
or 10 years. As above stated, the law appHes in some States to only
one, in others to several groups of industries. In some cases an age
limit is prescribed under which children can not be employed except
during vacation, and in some an age limit is fixed under which
persons can not be employed in certain occupations or during
certain hours. ...
F. Workmen^s Compensation, 1913^
Probably no subject connected with .the improvement in the position of labor
has received more widespread recognition and support in recent years than that
of the indemnification of workmen for injuries received in the pursuit of their
work. Lack of space prevents adequate discussion, but this extract will indicate
the importance of the subject.
The Fourth Special Report of the Commissioner of Labor, issued
in 1893 under the title of "Compulsory Insurance in Germany," was
the first report published in this country devoted to the subject of
workmen's insurance. At that time compensation for industrial
accidents had been established by law in two countries only, Ger-
many in 1884, and Austria in 1887; the third country — Norway —
not following until 1894. In the other countries discussed in the
appendix of this early report the workmen's compensation movement
had not passed beyond the stage of Government commissions and
legislative discussion.
Since the pubhcation of this first report, the development of the
legislation providing for workmen's compensation for industrial acci-
dents in Europe and throughout the world has been extremely rapid;
^ Workmen's Compensation Laws of the United States and Foreign Countries.
Bulletin of the United States Bureau of Labor Statistics, No. 126 (Washington,
1914); 9-10.
8o6 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
in fact, it may be doubted whether any subject of labor legislation
has ever made such progress or gained so general acceptance for its
principles throughout the world in so brief a period. The legislative
summaries in the present report show that 41 foreign countries (in-
cluding all European countries except Turkey) have introduced some
form of workmen's compensation for industrial accidents, all of which,
while showing great variations in the industries covered, the amount of
compensation provided, and the methods by which compensation
payments are secured, recognize the principles of compensation as
distinguished from the older idea of employer's liability previously
accepted in the civil law of continental Europe, as well as in English
and American law.
In the United States what might be called the period of investiga-
tion and education began somewhat late as compared with European
countries. But since that beginning, investigation and study ha\ <
been followed by legislative action with great rapidity. The first
American State commissions were appointed in New York, Wis-
consin, and Minnesota in 1909, and legislation followed in New York
in 1910, in Wisconsin in 191 1, and in Minnesota in 1913. Within
this period beginning with 1909, 27 commissions (not including one
Federal commission) have been appointed to consider the subject of
compensation, and compensation legislation has been enacted in 23
States.
G. The Federal Compensation Act, igo8 ^
The federal government was a pioneer in the United States in the enactment
of legislation granting compensation to employees injured while at work. It thu
recognized the necessity of placing the social cost of industrial accidents upon tlu
industry itself rather than upon the laborer. Its example has since been followed
by the leading industrial and mining states of the Union.
Injuries to workmen in the course of their employment may b(
due to negligence or to accident. Where negligence is the cause, i\v
fault may be that of the workman or his employer, of a fellow workman
or even a stranger. Where accident is the cause, no one is at fauli
In all cases the suffering and the loss fall on the injured person and hi
dependents, except in so far as the law permits the loss to be comi)en
sated. The rules of the common law, which were formulated at a
time when industrial operations were simple and conducted in small
establishments where responsibility could easily be fixed, permitted
* Opinions of the Solicitor for the Department of Commerce and Labor dealt n
Vfith Workman's Compensation . . . from August, IQ08, to August, IQ12. (Wash
ington, 191 2), 9-1 1.
POPULATION AND LABOR 807
recovery only where the workman or his representatives could estab-
lish negligence on the part of the employer, and denied relief if his
own negligence in any way contributed to the injury or if the injury
was due to the negligence of a fellow servant or a stranger, and also
compelled the worker to assume the risks incident to a dangerous em-
ployment. For injuries due to accidents alone there could be no
recovery, since a legal wrong could be imputed to no one. The altered
situation, growing out of the immense changes made in industrial
conditions, brought a realization of the great injustice worked by
established rules of law. Irrespective of the neghgence of the employer
or a fellow servant or a stranger, and irrespective of the risks incident
to dangerous occupations, it was recognized as grossly unjust that
the victim alone should be allowed to bear the entire consequences
and all the burden of an industrial accident or injury. It was seen
that the employment itself, if not the cause of the injury, furnished
at least the occasion or the condition without which it could not have
occurred. The principle was then formulated and accepted that the
financial loss occasioned by injuries received in the course of employ-
ment was a proper charge against the industry itself, at least where
the injury was not plainly due to the negligence or misconduct of the
person injured. A means was thus provided whereby the burden
in such cases could be shifted in a measure from a single victim and
distributed among many persons.
This principle was adopted and applied by the Federal Govern-
ment in the act of May 30, 1908, "granting to certain employees of
the United States the right to receive from it compensation for injuries
sustained in the course of their employment." Although this act is
of limited application and provides but a limited measure of relief,
its benefits have been many and real. It applies only to injuries
received by artisans or laborers employed in the manufacturing estab-
lishments, arsenals, or navy yards of the United States, or in river
and harbor or fortification work, or in hazardous employment in the
Reclamation Service and under the Isthmian Canal Commission,
under the Bureau of Mines and in the Forestry and Lighthouse Serv-
ices. But any such workman, injured in the course of his employ-
ment, is entitled to receive for one year thereafter, unless sooner able
to resume work, the same pay as if he continued to be employed,
except where the injury was due to his own negligence or misconduct.
If the injury should result in death during the year, the compen-
sation allowed is payable to the widow or children or dependent
parent
8o8 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
An idea of the benefits derived under the compensation act may-
be obtained from a consideration of a few figures. The act has been
in operation since August i, 1908. Between that date and December
I, 191 1, compensation was paid in 5,564 cases of injury, in 165 of which
the injury resulted in death. On account of these fatal injuries
$112,879.02 has been paid to surviving dependents. On account of
the nonfatal injuries $704,814.60 has been paid to the injured persons
themselves. . . .
H. Wages and Prices, i8yo-igoi ^
The changes in wages and prices between 1870 and 1901 resulted in a decline
in prices and a rise of wages, so that the net result was distinctly favorable to
the wage receivers. Since that time, however, there has been a net decline
in wages.
In considering the changes which have occurred in recent years
in the earnings of labor there are two factors to be taken into ac-
count, namely, money wages and cost of living.
. . . The accompanying table and chart are designed to show the
movements of wages. . . . The compilations of the Department of
Labor for the years 1870 to 1898 include 25 occupations, representing
building trades, machine trades, and the higher grades of railroad
employees, together with street laborers and teamsters. Another
compilation of the Department of Labor, covering the years 1891-1900,
includes 192 occupations. Each of these series of wage statistics has
been compiled in the accompanying table, and has been graphically
presented in the accompanying chart, by taking the average wages
of the year 1891 as a standard, equivalent to 100, and then computing
the wages of other years as percentages of this standard year. By
this method it can be seen that wages in the 25 selected occupations
touched the lowest point in 1876, when they stood at 85.5 per cent
of the figure for 1891, and that from that time until 1893 there was a
steady increase, followed by a decline, until 1898, when they stood
at 95.62 per cent of the figure for 1891. At the same time, the wages
of the 192 occupations for the years 1891 to 1898 show a close parallel
with those of the 25 selected occupations, and from 1898 to 1900
they rose 4.6 per cent. . . .
At the same time the decrease in the cost of many of the commodi-
ties most used by the working classes is a factor which has tended
to make their actual, as distinguished from money wages, greater.
' Pinal Report of the Industrial Commission. (Washington, 1902), XIX
73«>-734» Pcusim.
POPULATION AND LABOR
Relative movement of wages and wholesale prices
809
25 occupa-
Wages of
tions, wages
farm labor
Year
Prices
(in gold) 1
Prices 2
gold (wages
Wages, 192
(in gold)
for 1891
occupations *
per month
being
without
100) 3
board'
1869
1870
119. 0
84.64
104.8
1871
122.9
. .
9400
1872
121. 4
96.26
1873
II4S
92.13
1874
116. 6
90.46
187s
114. 6
88.11
92.9
1876
108.7
85.65
1877
107.0
88.21
1878
103.2
90.66
18.79
950
91.12
88.3
1880
104.9
91.94
1881
108.4
94-59
1882
109. 1
96.16
101.7
1883
106.6
97 05
1884
102.6
97.83
1885
93-3
97.15
96.6
1886
93-4
97-15
1887
945
97.93
1888
96.2
98.52
98.0
1889
98. 5
98.82
1890
93-7
99.31
98.6
1891
94-4
95
lOO.OO
lOO.OO
100. 0
1892
90
100.59
100.30
1893
90
99.94
99-32
102.6
1894
82
97.98
98.06
95.4
1895
81
97.19
97-88
95. 1
1896
n
96.60
97-93
1897
73
96.11
98.96
1898
79
95.62
98.79
104.2
1899
77
101.54
108.7
1900
90
103-43
1901
88
1 Jan. I. (Aldrich Report, Senate Rep., 52d Cong., 2d sess., Pt. I, p. 100.)
2 Year ending June 30. (Bureau of Economic Research.)
3 Year ending Dec. 31. (Bulletin, Department of Labor, Sept., 1898.)
^ Year ending Dec. 31. (Bulletin, Department of Labor, July, 1900.)
5 Year ending Dec. 31. (Dept. of Agr., Bulletm 22, Mis. Series, 1901.)
8io READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
Taking into account these observations, it must be concluded
that the daily rate of wages is not a safe measure of the changing
conditions of labor, and that in a discussion of the progress of the
working population account must be taken of the amount of annual
employment, depending on general conditions of prosperity and de-
pression, the life earnings of the worker, depending upon the increas-
ing intensity of exertion and overwork, and the increased necessary
expenses of city life.
I. Higher Cost of Living, igio ^
Wages may be nominally high, that is, the laborer may receive a larger number
of dollars than formerly, but if the prices of the commodities for which he spends
his money have also advanced, his real wages may have remained stationary or
even decUned. Hence it is very important in every investigation of wages to
establish also the movement of prices.
The advance in prices has been world-wide, although the products
of the farm and food products have advanced much more rapidly
than have manufactured articles. This is probably due to two causes;
first, the prices of farm products and of food are more sensitive than
manufactured commodities and would therefore respond more quickly
to causes producing higher prices; and, second, a study of the course
of prices of such farm products and food as are produced in the
United States indicates that the demand has outgrown the production
of such commodities, and that the production of manufactured
articles and of articles usually imported into the United States have
outgrown our production of farm products and domestic food supplies.
This condition has no doubt been brought about to a considerabU
extent by the withdrawal from the farms of large numbers of persons
who have entered industrial pursuits and become food consumers
rather than food producers, and to the rapidly increased cost of pro-
duction of farm products. . . .
Retail prices in the United States in the spring of 1910 were for
many articles at the highest point reached for many years. As com-
pared with the spring of 1900 prices for bacon were more than 70
per cent higher, ham was 33 per cent higher, flour was about 50 per
cent higher, butter about 45 per cent higher, sugar 12 per cent higher,
and eggs 100 per cent higher. Some few articles, such as coffee and
tea, were about the same price as in 1900, but practically no article s
of food were lower than in 1900. . . .
* Investigation Relative to Wages and Prices of Commodities, 6ist Cong., .^<1
leu., Sen. Doc. No. 847 (Washington, 191 1), I, 10, 37, 52.
POPULATION AND LABOR 8ir
Wages have not advanced as rapidly as have prices and practically
all labor difficulties which have been the subject of mediation in the
United States during the past two or three years have had as their
basis the advanced cost of living. In the United States wages have
advanced much more rapidly than they have in European countries,
in fact in some European countries practically no advance has been
made during the ten years under consideration.
Wages in the United States advanced in about the same degree as
did prices until 1907. Owing to the industrial depression of 1908,
following the financial panic of the fall of 1907, wages dropped con-
siderably and in 1909 hardly more than regained the high point
reached in 1907.
Wages at the present time are not on as high a level as are food
prices. Salaries have advanced but very little during the past ten years.
Hours of labor in practically all wage occupations have been re-
duced. The United States Bureau of Labor compilation of wages
and hours of labor in the principal manufacturing industries has not
been continued later than 1907. In 1907, wages were 22.1 per cent
above 1900. Hours of labor per week during the same period were
reduced 3.7 per cent. The decline in hours of course affected the
weekly earnings of employees for the reason that the large majority
of wage earners are employed either on the piece basis or at an hourly
rate. From 1900 to 1907 full time weekly earnings advanced 17.6
per cent, while wholesale prices of commodities advanced 17.2 per
cent, or in almost exactly the same proportion.
J. A Nation at Work, 1880 ^
It has generally been remarked that in the United States there is practically
no leisure class; ninety-three per cent of the men in the productive age periods
from 16 to 60 are at work and the rest are presumably preparing for work. Ap-
parently the women show a larger proportion not engaged in gainful occupations,
but if we allot one woman as housekeeper to each of the 10,000,000 families in
the country in 1880, the proportion of the unoccupied among the women is about
the same as for the men. Since 1880 the proportion of the population over ten
years of age engaged in gainful occupations has increased.
The following table makes comparison between the number of
inhabitants of either sex in each of the periods of life, taken for the
purposes of these tables, and the corresponding number of persons
returned as pursuing gainful occupations:
1 Statistics of the Population of the United States at the Tenth Census. (Wash-
ington, 1883), I, 704.
8l2
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
Total lo years and
upward
Male Female
16 to 59
Male Female
Population (lo years of age
and upward)
18,735,980
14,744,942
18,025.627
2,647,157
13,907,444 13,377,002
12,986,111 ?. 283, 115
Number on occupation tables. .
Unaccounted for
3,991,038
15,378,470
921,333 11,093,887
Between 16 and 59 the number of males unaccounted for is 921,333
[or 7 per cent]. This number is made up chiefly of the following
classes: First, those students who are pursuing courses of study
beyond the age of 16; second, those who are afflicted by permanent
bodily or mental infirmities, disqualifying them from participating
in the industry of the country; third, the members of the criminal
and pauper classes. The number of men of this period of life, not dis-
abled, who are not returned as of some occupation by reason of in-
herited wealth or of having retired from business is hardly important
enough in this country to be mentioned. The number of females
between 16 and 59 not accounted for in these tables is, naturally,
vastly larger, and amounts to 11,093,887 [or 83.5 per cent]. That
body is made up of the three classes just mentioned when speaking
of the males of this period of life, and of the far greater classes of
women — wives, mothers, or grown daughters, keeping house for their
families or living at home without any special avocation. . . .
CHAPTER XXIII
ECONOMIC PROGRESS, 1860-1915
I. Wealth of the People of the United States
National Wealth, 1850-1912 ^
In an effort to gauge the economic progress of the last half century we may
properly begin with an estimate of the increase in the wealth of the people of the
United States. This has grown from a total of 7 to 187 billion dollars, between
1850 and 191 2, while the per capita amount has increased from $308 to $1965 in
the same period. The character of this wealth and its amount in comparison with
that of other countries are also shown in this extract. All the facts show a large and
rapid increase in the wealth of the nation as a whole.
Table i. — Estimated True Value of all Property
Date Total Per Capita
1850 $7,135,780,228 $308
i860 16,159,616,068 514
1870 24,054,814,806 1 624
1880 43,642,000,000 870
1890 65,037,091,197 1,036
1900 88,517,306,77s 1,165
1904 107,104,192,410 1,318
1912 187,739,071,090 1,965
1 Gold basis.
. . . These estimates have been prepared upon two different bases
and by a number of different methods. The estimates for 1850,
i860, and 1870 were confined to taxable real property and the personal
property of private individuals, firms, and corporations. They did
not include any estimates of the value of the public domain nor of
other exempt realty, nor of the value of the furniture or equipment
of public buildings of governments nor of charitable, religious, or
educational institutions, all of which were included in the estimates
for 1880, 1890, 1900, 1904, and 191 2. . . .
Estimates for 191 2 and 1900. — Table 2, which follows, affords a
ready means of comparing the total values of the several classes of
wealth in 191 2 with those of 1900. . . .
1 Estimated Valuation of National Wealth, 1850-1912. Census Bulletin
(Washington, 1915), 14-16, 18-20.
8i4
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
Table 2. — Estimates of Wealth for 191 2 and 1900
(in millions of dollars)
Form of Wealth
1912
1900
Total $187,739
Real property and improvements taxed
Real property and improvements exempt
Live stock
Farm implements and machinery
Manufacturing machinery, tools, and implements
Gold and silver coin and bullion
Railroads and their equipment
Street railways, etc.:
Street railways
Telegraph systems ^
Telephone systems
Pullman and cars not owned by railroads
Shipping and canals
Irrigation enterprises
Privately owned waterworks
Privately owned central electric light and power stations
All other:
Agricultural products
Manufactured products
Imported merchandise
Mining products
Clothing and personal adornments
Furniture, carriages, and kindred property
88,517
98,362
46,324
12,313
6,212
6,238
3,306
1,368
749
6,091
2,541
2,616
1,677
16,148
9,035
4,596
1,576
223
2n
1,081
400
123
98
1,491
537
360
....
290
267
2,098
402
5,240
1. 455
14,693
6,087
826
424
815
326
4,295
2,000
8,463
4,880
i Includes wireless systems.
Estimated wealth of different countries. — Owing to the insufficiency
of official and trustworthy data pertaining to the subject, it has been
impossible to prepare a summary of the aggregate wealth of all nations.
The following statement summarizes the information concerning th(
wealth of the principal nations as it has been assembled by Augustus D,
Webb, Fellow of the Royal Statistical Society, and published in "The]
New Dictionary of Statistics" for 191 1. The authority referred t<
gives the values in pounds sterling. The reduction to dollars is at]
the rate of $4.8665 per pound sterling. It will be observed that thej
figures for the United States are those compiled by the Bureau of
the Census for the year IQ04. The data presented arc far from com-
parable because of the difierence in dates for which the estimate
were made and the character of the data included. . . .
ECONOMIC PROGRESS
8iS
Country
Year
Character of data
Amount
United States
1904
1903
1903
1903
1903
1903
1903
1903
0)
1900
1908
1903
1905
1907
Total wealth
$107,104,192,410
108,279,625,000
British Empire
Total wealth
Total wealth....
United Kingdom
72,997,500,000
6,569,775,000
Canada
Total wealth
Australasia
Total wealth
India
Total wealth
5,353,150,000
South Africa
Total wealth
2,919,900,000
5,839,800,000
46,798,500,000
1,946,600,000
77,864,000,000
4,578,903,000
1,605,945,000
428,939,492
Remainder of Empire.
Total wealth
France
Private wealth
Denmark
Total wealth
Germany
Total wealth
Austraha
Private wealth
New Zealand
Public and private wealth.
Fixed property
Cape of Good Hope
" Recently.
II. Distribution of Wealth
A. Labor^s Share in the Net Product of Industry, 18 50-1880 ^
It is not enough to show that there has been an increase of wealth in the United
States during the past half-century. Even more important from a social point of
view is the answer to the question, "Who gets this wealth?" An effort was made
to answer this question in an early report of the Massachusetts bureau of statistics
of labor, by Carroll D. Wright, who afterwards became the United States com-
missioner of labor. Mr. Wright concludes that as a result of the improvements in
machinery the relative share of labor in the net product of industry has declined
from 51 per cent in 1850 to 48.1 per cent in 1880.
Net product, or value of product remaining after deducting value
of raw materials of manufacture, represents the direct result of the
productive forces in the given industry; or, in other words, it repre-
sents the value created over and above the value of raw materials
by the effective operation of labor and capital united.
The value of net product forms, as we have said, a fund divisible
into interest on capital, interest on loans, insurance, freights, rents,
commissions, wages, and profits. Now if the relative share paid to
1 History of Wages and Prices in Massachusetts: 17 52-1883. Sixteenth Annual
Report of the Massachusetts Bureau of Statistics of Labor, Parts III and IV
(Boston, 1885), 34-36.
8i6 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
labor in the form of wages is decreased, it is, of course, obvious that
the share remaining for the other purposes mentioned is increased. If
capital is also relatively decreased, then it is fair to suppose that the
share chargeable to interest is also diminished. It is well known that
the relative cost of freights and insurance has decreased. Allowing,
then, for a possible increase in rents and commissions, it would seem
probable that, in the industries last examined, the share drawn out
as profits has relatively increased, though such an assumption is
perhaps unwarranted in the absence of definite data. It is, however,
clearly inferential from the tables.
It is well established that the proportionate cost of labor in the
finished fabric has been greatly reduced through the use of machinery.
This reduction of actual labor cost has been an important element in
reducing the price of product to the consumer, while permitting at the
same time a liberal increase of wages to the laborer. An examination
of these two tables would, we think, lead to the conclusion that al-
though in every case money wages have considerably increased, yet
in certain industries in which the principles of the factory system
(i.e., sub-division of labor, co-ordination of processes, and the appli-
cation of a series of mutually dependent and practically automatic
machines) have been most effective, such, for instance, as in the cotton
and woollen industries, the relative share of net product gained by the
workman tends to decrease. That is to say, in these industries per-
fection of machines and processes constantly tends to create a larger
product with less capital, and the ratio of increase in productive
capacity tends to outrun the ratio of increase in wages, so that of
this larger product labor obtains a less relative share, although it is
produced at less expenditure of time and effort, and rewarded by a
constantly increasing wage.
From the following presentation which exhibits the same data
for all the industries in the United States, for 1850 and 1880, it appears
that, when the field is broadened so as to include the entire manu-
facturing industries of the country, labor's share of net product has
declined from 51 to 48.1 per cent. This slight decrease, however, is
more than offset by the relative increase in capital.
It appears probable, then, that when all industries are considered
money wages have not only increased, but that a slight increase has
also taken place in the relative share of net product secured by labor
after payment of interest on capital invested.
ECONOMIC PROGRESS
Ratio oj Wages to Net Product: 1850 and 1880
817
The United States
Average
wages
1850
Average
wages
1880
Percentage of
net product
paid as wages
1850
Percentage of
net product
paid as wages
1880
All industries
$247.11
$346.91
51
48.1
Ratio of Capital to Net Product:
1850 and 1880
The United States
Amount of
capital
per dollar of
net product
1850
Amount of
capital
per dollar of
net product
1880
Percentage of
increase
All industries
$1.15
$1.41
22.6
B. Profits and Wages, i8go-igoo ^
The same problem that was discussed in the previous extract was taken up
by the Industrial Commission of 1S98. The figures given as to the relative share
of labor in the net product of industry show a further decUne since 1880. In 1890
it was 44.9 per cent and in 1900 it had fallen to 41 per cent. The decade 1890-
1900 had also witnessed a decrease in actual wages, so that the lot of labor was
absolutely as well as relatively worse at the end than it had been at the beginning
of this period. On the other hand the Commission points out that there has been
a steady tendency for interest rates to fall during the previous thirty years. It
may be said that in all points concerning labor and capital this report was very
conservative.
PROFITS AND WAGES
The problem of profits and wages must be considered under two
separate and wholly distinct aspects. The first question has to do
with the share of the product of industry going to labor as compared
with the share going to owners of capital, land, monopolies, etc. The
second question — an entirely different one — is that which has to
do with actual income and social well-being of the manual working
classes. That the two problems are quite separate may be shown from
^ Final Report of the Industrial Commission.
sion's Reports (Washington, 1902), 724-729-
Volume XIX of the Commis-
8i8 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
the fact that, on the one hand, the share of the social product going to
labor might be continually increasing from year to year and at the same
time the actual income of the working people might be growing less,
provided the aggregate product of society itself were decreasing. On
the other hand, the actual income and social well-being of the working
population might be on a steady increase and yet the share going
to labor might be growing smaller and smaller, provided the aggre-
gate production were increasing in greater ratio than the increase in
the actual income of the working people.
UNCERTAINTY OF STATISTICS
The solution of the first of these questions, that having to do with
the share of the social product going to labor, is, perhaps, the most
difficult and unsatisfactory of all statistical problems. . . .
Equally misleading are the conclusions frequently drawn from the
census of the United States respecting the proportion of the total
product which goes to capital and labor respectively. The census of
1890, for example, estimated the value of manufactured products for
the entire United States at $9,372,000,000, and the aggregate wages
in the same industries at $2,283,000,000, according to which it would
appear that labor received 24.36 per cent of the joint product. But
this inference is manifestly wrong, since the cost of material used in
manufactures was more than half the value of the product, viz.,
$5,162,000,000, or 55.08 per cent. Miscellaneous expenses also were
6.73 per cent of the total product. The proper method of inquiry
into the proportion of the product going to labor is that which separates
out the cost of material and endeavors to discover what proportion
of the net product is assigned to labor. If this is done, it appears
that in 1890 the net product of all manufacturing industries was
$4,211,000,000, and of this net product the total wages paid would
be 54 per cent instead of 24 per cent. The above figure for wages,
however, includes salaried employees, officers, superintendents, firm
members, and clerks. The payment to wage-earners, properly speak-
ing (but including some overseers and foremen on salary), was $1,891,-
228,321, or 44.9 per cent of the value of the net product of manu-
facturing industry.
The complete figures for the census of manufactures of 1900 have
been secured, a trifle in advance of their general publication, through
the courtesy of the chief of the Division of Manufactures. The net
product of manufacturing industry in the United States by the Census
of iQcx) was $5,669,335,584; while the wages paid (not including any
ECONOMIC PROGRESS 819
salaried officers) were $2,323,407,257, or 41 per cent of the net product.
. . . There has been a decrease in the proportion of the total product
going to wage-earners; while, as shown elsewhere, the absolute
amount going to the wage-working class has slightly decreased per
capita during the decade. Wages in 1899, the year actually covered
by the census figures, had not reached a point as high as in 1900 and
1 901. In a period of rising prosperity wages ordinarily advanced
less rapidly than prices and profits.
EARNINGS OF CAPITAL
When we consider the entirely different problem of the increase
or decrease of profits and wages over a period of years, we are met
again not only by the defects of statistical inquiry, but by inherent
difficulties of the problem. As regards the changes in the rates of
interest and profits over a period of years, there are two entirely dif-
ferent questions to be considered. The first is the interest or profit
received on disposable capital seeking investment in the open money
markets. The second is the profits made by those enterprises which
have an established existence. In the first case the rate of interest
depends upon the opportunities for investment which have not yet
been occupied and which may be much less profitable than those
already in possession; while in the second case the rate of profit is
determined for different investments by the different conditions sur-
rounding each, especially the possession of good will, trade-marks,
patent rights, and monopolies of various kinds. Monopoly privi-
leges, for example, wherever they exist, become more and more
valuable as population increases and the net returns are thereby
augmented; but, at the same time, the rate of interest on dispos-
able capital not protected by these privileges has continually declined.
As regards disposable capital, every statistical exhibit of value
shows, during the past 30 or 40 years, this steady decline in the rate
of interest. Here distinction should be made between call loans,
loans on commercial paper, and loans on long-time securities. The
interest on call loans is the interest on bankers' balances, and the rate
depends largely on the temporary supply of legal tender and the con-
dition of the Federal Treasury, whereas the interest on commercial
paper and the interest received on long-time investments depends
upon the general business prosperity. The following table and statis-
tical chart exhibit in an impressive way the general decline of interest
on these classes of investments. The rates on call loans and com-
mercial paper are shown for New York City from the year 1866 to
820 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
1901, and indicate the rapid decline immediately thereafter following
the year 1873, and the more gradual decline, with fluctuations
dependent upon current conditions of business prosperity and depres-
sion. More stable than the rate on commercial paper is that received
by insurance companies, which is shown for 30 years. Here it appears
that the average rate of interest for the years from 1871 to 1875 was
6.88 per cent, whereas for the 7 years from 1891 to 1897 it was 4.98
per cent. . . .
The rates of interest quoted are, as already stated, those received
on disposable capital which is open to competition and does not pos-
sess any special privileges or advantages protecting it from comp>eti-
tors. When it is attempted to discover the rate of profit received
on capital invested in business, an insurmountable difficulty is pre-
sented in all industries except one, namely national banks. . . .
While the banking business fluctuates with the general conditions of
industry, it is, of course, impossible to draw conclusions from the his-
tory of this one business which shall apply to others respecting the
rate of profits.
C. The Growth of Large Fortunes, igij ^
A very different answer to the question as to the actual distribution of wealth
was given in the report of the Commission on Industrial Relations in 191 5. Accord-
ing to this re|X)rt most of the wealth is going, not to the workers, but to a small
group of rich men, in whose huge fortunes is concentrated an ever-increasing pro-
portion of the national wealth. This report is in striking contrast with that of
the earlier Industrial Commission of 1898, and is decidedly radical in its tone and
recommendations.
. . . What do the millions get for their toil, for their skill, for the
risk of life and limb? That is the question to be faced in an industrial
nation, for these millions are the backbone and sinew of the State,
in peace or in war.
First, with regard to the adult workmen, the fathers and potential
fathers, from whose earnings, according to the ''American standard,"
the support of the family is supposed to be derived.
Between one-fourth and one-third of the male workers 18 years
of age and over, in factories and mines, earn less than $10 per week;
from two-thirds to three-fourths earn less than $15, and only about
one-tenth earn more than $20 a week. This (]iu^^ noi tnkr inin mu-
sideration lost working time for any cause.
Next are the women, the most portentously gruwnig lacLur 111 tlie
* Pinal Report of the Commission on Industrial Relations (Washington, i')i-V
25-27.
ECONOMIC PROGRESS 821
labor force, whose wages are important, not only for their own support
or as the supplement of the meager earnings of their fathers and hus-
bands, but because, through the force of competition m a rapidly
extending field, they threaten the whole basis of the wage scale. From
two-thirds to three-fourths of the women workers in factories, stores
and laundries, and in industrial occupations generally, work at wages
of less than $8 a week. Approximately one-fifth earn less than $4
and nearly one-half earn less than $6 a week. . . .
Last of all are the children, for whose petty addition to the stream
of production the Nation is paying a heavy toll in ignorance, deform-
ity of body or mind, and premature old age. . . .
This is the condition at one end of the social scale. What is at
the other?
Massed in millions, at the other end of the social scale, are fortunes
of a size never before dreamed of, whose very owners do not know the
extent nor, without the aid of an intelligent clerk, even the sources,
of their incomes. Incapable of being spent in any legitimate manner,
these fortunes are burdens, which can only be squandered, hoarded,
put into so-called ''benefactions" which for the most part constitute
a menace to the State, or put back into the industrial machine to
pile up ever-increasing mountains of gold.
In many cases, no doubt, these huge fortunes have come in whole
or in part as the rich reward of exceptional service. None would deny
or envy him who has performed such service the richest of rewards,
although one may question the ideals of a nation which rewards excep-
tional service only by burdensome fortunes. But such reward can
be claimed as a right only by those who have performed service, not
by those who through relationship or mere parasitism chance to be
designated as heirs. Legal right, of course, they have by virtue of
the law of inheritance, which, however, runs counter to the whole
theory of American society and which was adopted, with important
variations, from the English law, without any conception of its ulti-
mate results and apparently with the idea that it would prevent
exactly the condition which has arisen. In effect the American law
of inheritance is as efficient for the establishment and maintenance
of families as is the English law, which has bulwarked the British
aristocracy through the centuries. Every year, indeed, sees this ten-
dency increase, as the creation of "estates in trust" secures the ends
which might be more simply reached if there were no prohibition of.
"entail." According to the income tax returns for ten months of
1914, there are in the United States 1598 fortunes yielding an income
822 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
of $100,000 or more per year. Practically all of these fortunes are so
invested and hedged about with restrictions upon expenditure that
they are, to all intents and purposes, perpetuities.
An analysis of 50 of the largest American fortunes shows that nearl\'
one-half have already passed to the control of heirs or to trustees
(their vice regents) and that the remainder will pass to the control
of heirs within twenty years, upon the deaths of the "founders."
Already, indeed, these founders have almost without exception retired
from active service, leaving the management ostensibly to their heirs
but actually to executive officials upon salary.
We have, according to the income tax returns, forty-four familie-
with incomes of $1,000,000 or more,^ whose members perform littk
or no useful service, but whose aggregate incomes, totalling at the
very least fifty millions per year, are equivalent to the earnings of
100,000 wage earners at the average rate of $500.
The ownership of wealth in the United States has become concen-
trated to a degree which is difficult to grasp. The recently published
researches of a statistician of conservative views ^ have shown that
as nearly as can be estimated the distribution of wealth in the United
States is as follows:
The '' Rich," 2 per cent of the people, own 60 per cent of the wealth.
The "Middle Class," 33 per cent of the people, own 35 per cent of
the wealth.
The " Poor," 65 per cent of the people, own 5 per cent of the wealth.
This means in brief that a little less than two million people, who
would make up a city smaller than Chicago, own 20 per cent more of
the Nation's wealth than all the other ninety millions.
The figures also show that with a reasonably equitable division of
wealth, the entire population should occupy the position of comfort
and security which we characterize as Middle Class.
D. Distribution of the National Income, 1850-igio ^
The most careful and comprehensive study yet made of the distribution of the
wealth and income of the people of the United States amonp: the different factors
of production is the book by Dr. King, from which this extract is taken. This
* The income tax statistics, as a matter of fact, cover only a period of ton
months in 19 14.
» Professor Willford I. King, The Wealth atid Income of the People of tke UniU-d
Slates.
' The Wealth and Iticome of the People of the United States. By Willford I.
King (New York, 1915), 154-172, passim. I*rinted by permission of the author
and the publishers, The Macmillan Company.
ECONOMIC PROGRESS 823
temperate and judicious study concludes that aU the factors have shared in the
increase in wealth, while the technical improvements and consequent increase
of production of the past half -century have resulted in a great increase in the pur-'
chasing power of the earnings of all classes.
It is evident that the economic welfare of the individuals compos-
ing each group or class will depend upon three things: first, the
size of the stream; second, the share going to the group or class*
third, the number of persons within the class among which the
share is to be divided. Any study, then, of the relative progress
of any segment of the population involves a consideration of these
three points. . . .
Rent has been estimated as a percentage of the value of the land.
This involves an error in that it fails to account for the fact that land
value represents the total present worth of future as well as of present
rentals, and so takes account of increases in the rent which are
expected to occur later. In a new country, where steadily rising rents
are normally anticipated, the value of land is considerably greater
than that obtained by capitalizing the present rent at current interest
rates. An attempt has been made to offset any error from this
source by using the low rate of four per cent of the value as an estimate
of the rent of the land.
In computing the share of interest, the rates have been taken as
from six to eight per cent of the estimated value of existing capital
goods. Since there is no uniformity in the Census reports concern-
ing the things classed as capital, the estimate of the total value of
capital goods is necessarily a very crude one.
The remainder of the total product has been entered under the
head of profits. The author realizes that some economists would
prefer to class monopoly gains with rent but it was not feasible to do
so in this case, even if such a course were desirable.
To sum up, it is believed that the share of wages is rather accurately
set apart, that the share of rent is close enough to the reality to
answer some of the questions commonly asked about it, and
that the division of the remainder of the total net product be-
tween interest and profits, though admittedly very inaccurate, yet
is as close to the facts as can easily be estimated from the Census
material and indicates the truth in a broad way. The general
estimates appear in Table XXX and the salient features are brought
out by Fig. 18.
824
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
TABLE XXX
The Estimated Total National Income for the Continental United
States Divided into Rent, Interest, Profits, and Returns to
Employees
Amount in Millions of Dollars '
Census
Price
Year
Index 1
Total
Wages and
Salaries '
Interest
Rent
Profits
1850
2,213.8
792.8
276.5
170.6
973-9
139.2
1 860
3,635.6
1,351.1
532.6
321.2
1,430.7
141.3
1870
6,720.1
3,269.5
864.5
463.2
2,122.9
221.6
1880
7,390.7
3,803.6
1,373.2
642.3
1,571.6
132.4
1890
12,081.6
6,461.8
1,738.9
913.8
2,967.1
113.6
1900
17,964.5
8,490.7
2,695.7
1,396.0
5,382.1
101.7
1910
30,529-5
14,303.6
5,143.9
2,673.9
8,408.1
126.5
Census
Year
Purchasing Power, Base, 1890-1899
Total
Wages and
Salaries
Interest
Rent
Profits
1850
i860
1870
1880
1890
1900
1910
1,590.5
2,572.8
3,032.4
5,582.3
10,635.5
17,665.9
24,137.0
569.6
956.2
1,475.3
2,873.0
5,688.2
8,349.6
11,309.9
198.6
376.9
390.1
1,037-2
1,530.9
2,650.9
4,066.4
122.6
227.3
209.0
485.1
804.4
1,372.9
2,113.8
699.7
1,012.4
958.0
1,187.0
2,612.0
5,292.5
6,646.9
* Wholesale prices for year preceding the census. Bulletin 114 of tlte United
States Bureau of Labor Statistics, p. 149.
' The figures for wages and salaries are believed to be fairly accurate; thost
for rent are thought to have an error of not more than twenty per cent. The scpa
ration of the share of capital from that of the entrepreneur is very crudely dont
and no stress should be laid on the results. The total for all shares is thought t"
be more accurate than the mode of distribution and, for the last three census
yeart, should come within ten per cent of the correct statement of the national
ECONOMIC PROGRESS
Figure i8
825
Estimated Distribution of the National Income for the Continental
United States Among the Factors of Production
25
1
! 20
■
J
1
•
A
i
1
«°£ 10
i
i
\
P
P4 5
•
i
i
P
f
x^'
■^
f
?
5
4
i
W
^'^'
.^^'
^
C
IhbhJ
i^^
■■■1
^^H
^^H
Profltar
Interesl^
Zleiitl
I I
Census Year
But, after all, absolute figures are of but little interest to most of
us. Fig. 1 8 shows that all the shares have greatly increased; but we
have known that already. Which has been gaining at the expense
of the others? Which has been losing out in the race? The answer
to these questions is presented in Table XXXI and Fig. 19.
. . . We have observed that labor has been fairly successful in
retaining about a half of the total product, but this tells us nothing
about the portion going to each individual and the last is a question
income. For earlier years, the error should not be over twenty per cent at the
outside.
3 Wages and salaries were independently estimated, also, by the method of
multiplying the estimated number employed by the average wage received. The
variations for the different years between the respective results of the different
methods are as follows: 1850 — 4 per cent; 1860 — 5 per cent; 1870 — 5 per
cent; 1880 — 7 per cent; 1890 — i per cent; 1900 — 2 per cent, showing the
improving accuracy of recent figures.
826
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
TABLE XXXI
The Estimated Percentages of the Total National Income Received
Respectively by Labor, Capital, Land, and the Entrepreneur
Shares of Product ^
Census
Year
Wages and
Salaries
Interest
Rent
Profits
Total
1850
35.8
12.5
7-7
44.0
lOO.O
i860
37-2
14.7
8.8
39-3
lOO.O
1870
48.6
12.9
6.9
31.6
1 00.0
1880
51.5
18.6
8.7
21.3
1 00.1
1890
53-5
14.4
7.6
24.6
lOO.T
1900
47.3
15.0
7.8
30.0
I OCX
19x0
46.9
16.8
8.8
27.5
xoo.o
Computed from Table XXX.
Figure
19
Estimated Relative Shares of the Different Factors of Production
IN the National Income for the Continental' United States
W«e*
0«iuua Xeaxa«
ECONOMIC PROGRESS
827
of vastly more importance than the study of the share obtained by
labor en masse. Has the compensation for the efforts of the average
laborer increased as fast as should be the case considering the tre-
mendous improvements in industrial processes? Has the entrepreneur
distanced the employee in the race, constantly securing the lion's
share of the added spoils? Some light will be thrown upon these
questions by reference to Table XXXH. . . .
TABLE XXXII
The Estimated Returns for Personal Efforts in the Continental
United States
Census
Year
Average money
Average wage per
Average money
Average profits per
wage per em-
employee in pur-
profits in dollars
entrepreneur in
ployee per annum
chasing power ^
per entrepreneur
purchasing power 2
1850
$204
$147
$443
$318
i860
265
188
454
321
1870
397
179
497
224
1880
323
244
281
212
1890
398
350
418
368
1900
417
410
617
607
1910
507
401
899
711
Throughout the half century, the earnings, measured in commodi-
ties, of the average employee showed a most gratifying increase,
practically trebling in the five decades. Even the depression, caused
by the great monetary expansion and the consequent high prices of
the Civil War period, was almost overcome by 1869 and, from that
date on, each decade marked a striking advance.
III. How THE National Wealth is Expended
A. Advance in the Standard of Living, igio ^
It is a matter of common observation that the standard of living of modern
society .has advanced far beyond that set by our ancestors of fifty or a hundred
years ago. The way in which the demand for even the primary necessities of life,
as food, shelter, clothing, education, and social intercourse, has been changed in
character as a result of higher standards of living, is here analyzed.
1 Purchasing power of the money wage at the prices of 1 890-1 899.
2 Purchasing power of the money profits at the prices of 1 890-1 899.
3 Report of the [Massachusetts} Commission on the Cost of Living. (Boston,
1910), 494-496.
828 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
The general advance of the standard of living throughout all the
ranks of the population, from the highest to the lowest, is manifestl\-
one of the most potent causes of the increase of the demand for com-
modities, and consequently of the advance of prices. On every side
the wants of the people have been multiplied and diversified. The\
demand more and better things. Their requirements are larger,
more varied and more exacting. The growth of the cities, the cult (
fashion, the increase of leisure and numberless factors have combined
to bring about this advance of living standards. In itself, the im-
provement of the standard of living is a sign of cultural progress, to
be welcomed and encouraged. Rational extension and diversifica-
tion of consumption is highly desirable. When, however, the change
proceeds so rapidly as during the last decade, it accelerates greatl\-
the upward movement of prices. The resulting increase of the cost
of living is likely under these circumstances to produce a reactionary-
effect on the standard of living, causing the consumers to curtail
expenditures, and thus to abandon the gains that have been briefly-
won. In short, the advance of the standard of living, if not rationally
guided and safeguarded, threatens to bring about a later decline of
the standard to a lower level.
The various factors entering into the advance of the standard of
living have been admirably analyzed by Marcus M. Marks. He pohits
out the extension of the consumer's requirements with reference to
the five necessities of civilized existence, — food, shelter, clothing,
education and society, — as follows:
1. Food. — Finer and more varied food than heretofore is now
generally demanded by the workingman, on account of an educated
taste, and also, perhaps, because of the more general publicity as
to what is consumed by the other classes. The result is an increased
demand, which advances prices.
2. Shelter. — The standards of home conditions as to sanitation,
light, air and comfort have steadily advanced, until, as a result, more,
larger and costlier buildings are required to house the same number
of people, with a corresponding increase in rent. This creates a larger
demand for building materials and labor.
3. Clothing. — In former days garments were often worn until
the color changed and the cloth became threadbare; nowadays the
workingman discards clothing long before these conditions appear
Style has become more imperious and fashions more fickle. As i
the case in the improvement of homes, so, naturally, the larger deman« i
for clothing vastly increases the demand for materials and labor.
ECONOMIC PROGRESS
829
The resulting scarcity of wool, for example, has greatly advanced its
market price.
4. Education. — The present broader and more general education,
even though free from direct expense to the workingman, adds to
his cost of living by refining his tastes and increasing his desires.
For example, the purchase of a morning paper is now his regular
habit; an evening paper almost equally so; popular books and
magazines are included in the necessities of life; furthermore, life
insurance premiums and many other expenses incident to present-
day enlightenment are added to the cost of the workingman's living.
5. Society. — Finally, the desire for social intercourse, greater
in this day of general co-operation and interdependence than ever
before, again adds to the list of necessary expenses; there are many
outlays incident to going about and mingling with one's fellows which
need not be here detailed, but must be added to the cost of what is
now included in true living. . . .
B. How Much is Enough? igoj ^
Thus far the questions to which answers have been given are questions of fact:
What is the national income and how is it distributed among the different factors
of production? Here a question is raised as to what ought to be. What is a fair
living wage for the workers in our factories and mercantile establishments? Do
actual wages come up to this ideal standard? Numerous studies have been made
of the cost of Hving as shown in workingmen's budgets in an effort to discover
the necessary minimum for a thrifty and self-respecting family. The following
fixtract is taken from a careful study of this kind.
What, then, is a "fair living wage" for an average family? A
number of careful estimates have been made in answer to this
question. The Massachusetts Bureau of Statistics puts it at $724.
a year for a family of five; the New York Bureau of Labor at
$520.; Mr. John Mitchell, President of the United Mine Workers of
America, at $600.; Mr. Robert Hunter, author of "Poverty," says
$460. (for actual and necessary expenses); and Dr. Edward T.
Devine, Secretary of the Charity Organization Society of New
York City, estimates $600. as a minimum. These estimates were
all made at periods of lower prices and cost of living than the
present (1906).
A "fair livmg wage" should be large enough not only to cover
expenses which Mr. Rowntree calls "necessary for maintaining
1 Wage-earners' Budgets. By Louise B. More (New York, 1907), 268-270.
Printed with the permission of the author and of the publisher, Henry Holt and
Company.
830 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
merely physical efficiency," but it should allow for some recreation
and a few pleasures, for sickness, short periods of unemployment,
and some provision for the future in the form of savings, insurance,
or membership in benefit societies.
The whole question of a fair wage depends primarily on the amount
and cost of food necessary for proper nutrition. If a man is underfed,
he must underwork, as Mr. Rowntree says; his children are stunted
in growth and intellect, and when a man is unfit for work he fails to
get it or works for the lowest wages. Mr. Rowntree adds: '*Thi
most hopeless condition of the poor, as every social worker knows,
is unfitness for work. Unfitness for work means low wages, low wages
mean insufficient food, insufficient food means unfitness for labor,
and so the vicious circle is complete." ^
This investigation has shown that a well-nourished family of five
in a city neighborhood needed at least $6. a week for food. The aver-
age for 39 families, having five in a family, was $327.24 a year for
food. If we consider $6. a week (or $312. a year) as 43.4 per cent of
the total expenditure (which was the average percentage expended
for food in these 200 families, and very near the average for the work-
ingmen's famiUes in the extensive investigation of the Department
of Labor), the total expenditures would be about $720. a year. Il
therefore seems a conservative conclusion to draw from this stud\-
that a "fair living wage" for a workingman's family of average sizr
in New York City should be at least $728. a year, or a steady income
of $14. a week. Making allowance for a larger proportion of surplus
than was found in these families, which is necessary to provide ade-
quately for the future, the income should be somewhat larger than
this — that is, from $800. to $900. a year.
In conclusion, the fact that the "plane" or condition of living
which is sometimes forced upon a family by stress of economic cir-
cumstances does not necessarily reflect the standard of living of thai
family, should be emphasized. The "standard of living" is a relative
phrase, depending not only upon the amount of income, price of
commodities, rent, and other facts, but also upon the attitude of each
family toward life. This standard also varies greatly according to
extravagance or thrift, wasteful expenditures or intelligent house-
hold economy. From an economic standpoint, however, the amount
of income is the most important factor in determining the standard
of comfort attainable in an average workingman's family.
Rowntree, "Poverty," p. 46.
ECONOMIC PROGRESS \§
C. The Needs of a Self-supporting Woman, igi4 ^
The results of a careful investigation by the Minimum Wage Commission of
Massachusetts are presented briefly in the following extract. According to their
findings the lowest wage upon which a normal self-supporting woman could live
in Boston was $8.00 a week, a sum which was greater than that actually earned
by many workers in the brush industry. This conclusion is a partial answer to
the question raised in the preceding extract as to how much is enough.
A summary of the findings of the commission for the brush industry
is given in the first annual report of the commission, published in
January, 19 14. As stated in this report, it was found that almost
exactly two-thirds of the brush workers for whom wage records were
available received an average of less than $6 a week. At the conclu-
sion of this study of the brush industry, the commission was convinced
that the wages paid to a substantial number of the female employees
in that industry were inadequate to supply the necessary cost of living
and maintain the worker in health, and a wage board for that industry
was therefore established. . . . With regard to the needs of the em-
ployees, the following statements are made in the report of the Brush
Makers' Wage Board to the Minimum Wage Commission, March
17, 1914, as summarized in Bulletin No. 3 of the commission:
Lodging at the lowest level of decency cannot be found in Boston
for less than $1.50 per week. A minimum cost for food is at least
$3 a week. If one has the courage to go little beyond keeping warm
and dry, it cannot be done for less than $45 a year, or 87 cents a week.
For the preservation of health, average expenditures of $8.75 per
year, or 17 cents a week, seem an irreducible minimum. Car fare
requires at least 60 cents a week. The total budget so built up is:
Per week
Lodging $1.50
Food 3-00
Clothing 87
Car fare 60
Other 17
Total $6.14
This figure assumes ideal conditions, and is purely theoretical.
It allows nothing for laundry, for reading other than in public libra-
ries, for recreation, for church, for savings or for insurance of any kind.
At least these items must be added:
^ Second Annual Report of the Minimum Wage Commission of Massachusetts
(Boston, 1915), 8-9.
832 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
Per week
Laundry $0.20
Church. .10
Newspapers (.bunduy and every other day). . . .08
Vacation (one week per year at $10) .19
Picture show (once in two weeks) .05
Theatre (once in two months at 25 cents). ... ,04
Clothing (an addition of $25 per year) .48
Food .50
Lodging and extras .50
Total $2.14
The lowest total for human conditions for an individual in Boston
is thus seen to be $8.28. This amount is lower than that of $8.71
tentatively arrived at by the board early in its proceedings. It makes
no allowance for savings or insurance, and is not therefore a true
living wage. Allowing for variations between individuals, the wage
board is convinced that the sum required to keep alive and in health
a completely self-supporting woman in Boston is in no case less than
$8, and in many cases may rise to $9 or more.
D. Making Ends Meet, igoj
Two investigations have been made by the United States Commissioner of
Labor into the cost of Uving, the first in 1891 and a second more comprehensi\e
one in 1903. From the second of these is given a short extract showing the extent
to which wage-earners were able to adjust their expenditures to their incomes,
and how they disposed of the surplus or met the deficit at the end of the year. As
these conclusions were based upon a study of 25,440 families Uving in 33 state-
they may be regarded as fairly representative of American conditions. This ii
vestigation is probably the most comprehensive of its kind ever made. With this
reading should be compared extracts H and I of Part III of the previous chapter.
. . . The total income per family for the 25,440 families covered
by this inquiry was $749.50. . . .
The total expenditureper family for all purposes was $699. 24. . . .
The average income for the year of the 25,440 families e.xceedcd
their average expenditure by $50.26. This does not take into con-
sideration payments made during^ the year on the principal of mort-
gages upon homes, which, if distributed among all families would show
an increase in average savings of about $7. . . .
A surplus at the end of the year was reported by 12,816 familir
or about one-half of the whole number of families. The average
* Eighteenth Annual Report of the Commissioner of Labor. (Washington,
1904), 57, 60-1, 89.
ECONOMIC PROGRESS 8^3
surplus for these families was $120.84. A deficit was reported by
4,117 families, the average deficit for these families being $65.58.
Of the total there remained 8,507 famiHes, and these reported that
they came out even at the end of the year; that is, that as nearly as
they could account for their income and expenditure, they had used
up all they had earned or otherwise obtained during the year. This
report does not pretend to show the assets and liabihties of the fam-
ilies at the end of the year. Probably few families would show a
balance sheet exactly like that of the preceding year. Presumably
many of these families went forward or backward at least a little in
their assets; they most likely had more or less of furniture, clothing,
fuel, and food on hand than at the close of the preceding year.
The largest precentage of families having a surplus was in the
State of Washington, where 90.50 per cent reported a surplus. Except
in the States of Kentucky, Maryland, and Tennessee there were more
families reporting a surplus than families reporting a deficit. . . .
Of the total 2,567 families which reported their income and expendi-
ture in detail, 1,480 families had a surplus, 507 families had a deficit,
and 580 famiUes reported that they came out even at the end of the
year — that is, their expenditure equalled their income.
Of the families reporting a surplus, 491 had the surplus on hand in
cash, 682 had deposited the surplus in bank, 63 had placed it in build-
ing associations, 42 had invested it in real estate, 5 had invested it
in shares of stock, 3 had loaned it, 60 had paid preexisting debts with
it, I had disposed of it in some other way, and 133 made no report as
to what they had done with the surplus. Many of the families that
had put money into bank or had invested it in some way also had
more or less cash left on hand. . . . Seventy-nine of the 1,480
families which reported a surplus had also made payments on the
principal of the incumbrance on the home.
Of the 507 families which reported a deficit for the year, 244 had
met the deficit by obtaining credit, 94 had drawn on former savings,
I had mortgaged real estate, 2 had mortgaged furniture, i had sold
real estate, 13 had borrowed money, 2 had met the deficit in other
ways, and 150 made no report as to the method of meeting the deficit.
Nineteen of the families which reported a deficit for the year had made
payments on the principal of the incumbrance on the home.
Of the 580 famiUes which used up their whole income during the
year, 22 had in reality saved some money by making a payment on
the debt on the home.
834 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
E. Extravagance and Waste, igio ^
The existence of a deficit in the wage-earner's budget may be due to the in-
sufficiency of his income, but it may also be due to unwise expenditure or to down-
right waste. Some of the principal items in which individual extravagance or
waste may take place are described in the following extract. This is the dark side
of the picture.
INDIVIDUAL WASTAGE
A. Drink
It has long been known that the excessive use of alcoholic liquor
is a menace to the happiness and an injury to the welfare of those
peoples among whom it is prevalent, but not until the science of sta-
tistics was applied to the problem was the magnitude of its economic
importance appreciated. Of late we have come to know that by
sapping vitality, by bringing accident, disease and death, it causes
economic waste of enormous proportions. . . .
The economic effect of all this shows itself in two directions: first,
in the expense entailed on the community in costs of government
and charity; and second, in the injury to the productive eflficiency
of the community. . . .
The use of alcoholic beverages in this country has rapidly increased.
That of distilled spirits remains about stationary, the average retained
here for consumption having been 1.45 gallons per capita in the years
1871-78, and the same in the years 1901-08; but the average for malt
liquors in the same periods rose from 6.72 gallons a year to 18.88
gallons. In 1908 it was 20.97 gallons.
Observation leads us to believe that there has been in Massachu-
setts a material diminution of public drinking by the well-to-do in
the last generation, with less use of wine at banquets, of punch at
college reunions, less resort by business men to public bars, less con-
sumption of hard liquors in clubs. But the statistics indicate that
there must have been great increase in the use of malt liquors in home
and of resort to saloons by wage earners.
With the spread of education and the general progress of societ\
there ought to be a lessening of the evils produced from such a cau-
as this. We are not of the belief that the primary cure is to be foun
in legislation. Men cannot be made good by law. The most \m
I)ortant thing is to elevate the standards of the community, for ii
* Report of the Massachusetts Commission on the Cost of Living. (Boston, 1 1) i o ),
239-51.
ECONOMIC PROGRESS
83s
moral sense is the most powerful of all agencies. But the strong arm
of the law often has to be called upon to enforce the common will. . . .
Per Capita Consumption of Alcoholic Beverages in the United States
Year
1840
1850
i860
1870
1880
1890
1900
1908
Wines
(gallons)
Malt
Liquors
(gallons)
1.36
1.58
3.22
5-31
8.26
13.67
16.02
20.97
Spirits
(Proof
gallons)
2.52
2.23
2.86
2.07
1.27
1.40
1.28
1.44
Total
wines, malt
liquors
and spirits
(gallons)
4.17
4.08
6.43
7.70
10.08
15.53
17.69
23.01
Per Capita Consumption of Alcoholic Beverages in other Countries, igo2
Countries
Wines
(gallons)
Beer
(gallons)
Spirits
(gallons)
France
German Empire
Italy
Australian Commonwealth
United Kingdom
Canada
24.00
1. 14
27.00
I. II
.36
.09
4.80
25-50
.16
12.40
30-30
5.10
1-43
1.85
1.27
.85
I. OS
.80
B. Luxury
The recent period of rising prices has been marked by a tendency
toward extravagance among all classes, never before shown in this
country. . . .
In the twelve years since the use of self-propelled road vehicles
became mechanically perfected and commercially profitable, it is
estimated that a million automobiles have been produced, and sold
for more than a billion and a half dollars. In this production France,
until 1907, led the world, when it was passed by the United States,
836 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
which is now in the lead. The production of automobiles in the
United States this year will easily approximate $250,000,000. The
great bulk of this output represents pure luxury production, which has
taken at least 100,000 workers out of employments in which they were
producing commodities that were useful and of benefit to all the people,
into an occupation in which the product may be termed an economic
waste. . . .
The progress of civilization has demonstrated that the luxuries
of to-day are considered the necessities of to-morrow. The production
of automobiles for commercially economical and purely pleasurable
purposes is not likely to diminish, but rather to increase. Yet it
must be said that the present tendency toward luxury production
entails a penalty that must be paid by the whole community in an
advance of the prices of the necessary things of life. Three hundred
years ago an English writer said that such luxury "hath honey in
her mouth, gall in her heart, and a sting in her tail "; and in this age
the tendency toward universal extravagance, pleasant as its ap-
proaches are, and greatly as it throws its gilded charms on the world,
may enslave men more than the most active vices.
C Amusement
In considering the subject of amusement, among the many phases
of social and individual waste, the character and value of amusement
as an aid to individual and economic efficiency must be reckoned with
and estimated. . . .
... To put the matter in the proverbial phraseology of the race,
which expresses a homely wisdom gathered in the experience of the
ages, "All work and no play make Jack a dull boy." Relaxation
from labor is not in itself enough to compensate man for the physical
exhaustion and waste incident to daily work. The mere resting of
muscle and brain must be supplemented by some form of amusement,
some pleasure, which makes the worker forget the sweat and fret of
the day, and carries him into imaginary regions and conditions where
labor and its exhaustion are forgotten. . . .
The increase in the number of theaters and show houses from 75
in 1900 to 242 in 1 9 10 indicates a growth vastly out of proportion to
the growth of population in this Commonwealth, and a tendency to
extravagance. ... In 1910 we find only 50 theaters and houses
devoted to drama and vaudeville, while 192 are given over to "moving
pictures" and cheaper forms of vaudeville. . . .
It should be observed, furthermore, that the increase in the number
ECONOMIC PROGRESS 837
of "motion-picture" houses is largely in cities and towns devoted
to factory industries, and they furnish amusement to classes of workers
whose means debar them from theaters of the higher class, except on
rare occasions. It is worthy of note that wherever the "motion-
picture" houses are opened, the patronage of the liquor saloons in
the neighborhood shows a falling off; . . . But, when all possible
allowance has been made on these grounds, it is clear that the enormous
increase of the number of theaters and amusement places and of the
attendance during recent years marks an abnormal development of
the appetite for amusements, and represents a considerable squander-
ing of income. . . .
It is impossible to estimate the amount wasted on amusements;
the line between economic and uneconomic expenditure on this score
is so vague that a curve of waste cannot be plotted. . . . That a
deal of waste is now taking place in the form of excessive and de-
moralizing expenditure for amusements we believe, however, to be
a fact patent to any impartial observer. This waste is twofold. It
involves the unprofitable spending of money which might otherwise
have been devoted to forms of consumption that would heighten
efficiency, or to assistance in the production of useful commodities,
and it diminishes the industrial efficiency and consequently the out-
put of the working population. . . .
D, Domestic Waste
Domestic waste may be either destruction without profitable
result, or misuse, the latter taking the form of extravagance. Families
with incomes below $800 a year waste very little food material. They
may suffer from illness due to poor food, and thus waste income.
United States government investigations show waste of edible material
amounting to not more than 3 or 4 per cent, in this class. In the case
of families with incomes between $1,000 and $3,000 a year, all inves-
tigations show frequent wastes of 10 to 25 per cent, of foods purchased,
and extravagance in buying to an equal amount. Such families spend
from $300 to $800 a year for food. If 20,000 families in Boston spend
needlessly and to their own detriment $200 a year, the sum of
$4,000,000 annually is involved, besides the cost of caring for gar-
bage and loss through illness.
Food waste occurs in three principal ways:
I. Waste in marketing, including purchase of inedible material,
purchase in small quantities, purchase for flavor and tenderness
instead of nutrition, and sheer extravagance.
838
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
2. Waste in preparation, including preparation of too large
quantity for the meal or day, food made inedible by poor cooking,
and food unwholesome by wrong cooking.
3. Waste in supplies and cooked food, including garbage pure and
simple, and loss in moving and closing the house for the summer,
when whole packages are thrown away, etc.
IV. Saving and Thrift
A. Savings in the United States^ i86j-igij ^
The greatest channel for saving is undoubtedly the banks, and in the following
extract figures are given of the total deposits in all banks, and in those which are
especially used by the wage-earners. The statistics of the savings banks are par-
ticularly encouraging as giving evidence of a growing spirit of thrift as well as of
the existence of a disposable surplus. This is the bright side of the picture.
Number of Banks and of Deposits of State, Savings, and Private
Banks, Loan and Trust Companies, and National Banks, from
1863 to 1913
[Amounts in millions of dollars^
Year
Number of banks
reporting
Individual deposits
1863
1,466
$393-7
1865
1,960
641.0
1870
2,457
1,051.3
1875
3,33^
1,787.0
1880
3,355
1,951.6
1885
4,350
2,734.3
1890
7,999
4,062.5
1895
9,818
4,921.3
1900
10,382
7.238.9
1905
16,410
".350.7
1910
23,095
15,283.4
1913
25,993
17,475.7
SAVINGS DEPOSITS IN ALL BANKS
Savings deposits are supposed to represent chiefly the accumula-
tions of wage earners and other people of moderate means, and by
reason of this fact statistics relating to such deposits are of special
* Annual Report of the Comptroller of the Currrttry.
43-77. passim.
(Washington, 1914).
ECONOMIC PROGRESS
839
interest. Savings deposits in all banks of the country increased from
$6,496,192,707 in June, 1912, to $6,972,069,227 in June last, the in-
crease during the year being $475,876,520, or over 7 per cent. The
aggregate deposits in all banks on June 4, 19 13, roundly stated, were
$17,475,700,000; of this amount $6,972,000,000, as stated, was savings
deposits, exclusive of $211,445,687 held by savings banks subject
to check without notice. Statistics showing the number of savings
depositors in all banks for the current year are not available, but
the information obtained upon this subject in 191 1 showed that there
were on June 7 of that year over 17,600,000 savings accounts on
the books of the various banks of the country. . . .
Number
Number of
Average
Average per
Year
of banks
depositors
Deposits
due each
depositor
capita in the
United States
1820
10
8,63s
$1,138,576
$131.86
$ .12
1825
15
16,931
2,537,082
149.84
1830
36
38,035
6,973,304
183.09
.54
1835
52
60,058
10,613,726
176.72
1840
61
78,701
14,051,520
178.54
.82
1845
70
145,206
24,506,677
168.77
1850
108
251,354
43,431,130
172.78
1.87
1855
215
431,602
84,290,076
195.29
i860
278
693,870
149,277,504
215-13
4-75
1865
317
980,844
242,619,382
247-35
1870
517
1,630,846
549,874,358
337-17
14.26
1875
771
2,359,864
924,037,304
391.56
1880
629
2,335,582
819,106,973
350.71
16.33
1885
646
3,071,495
1,095,172,147
356.56
1890
921
4,258,893
1,524,844,506
358.03
24.35
1895
1,017
4,875,519
1,810,597,023
371.36
25.88
1900
1,002
6,107,083
2,449,547,885
401.10
31.78
1905
1,237
7,696,229
3,261,236,119
423.74
39.17
1910
1,759
9,142,908
4,070,486,246
445.20
45.05
1913
1,978
10,766,936
4,727,403,950
439-07
48.56
BXnLDING AND LOAN ASSOCIATIONS IN THE UNITED STATES
Statistics relating to the building and loan associations in the
United States for the year 191 2 have been obtained through the
courtesy of Mr. H. F. Cellarius, secretary of the United States League
of Local Building and Loan Associations.
There were in 191 2 in the United States 6,273 associations, with
840
READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
a total membership of 2,516,936, and having assets amounting to
$1,137,600,648. The total resources increased $106,913,627, or a
little over 10 per cent for the year, and the membership increased
184,107, or a little less than 8 per cent., during the same period. The
average amount due each member is $451.98, an increase of $10.17
per member for the year. . . .
SCHOOL SAVINGS BANKS
Through the courtesy of Mrs. S. L. Oberholtzer, who has under-
taken the work of collecting statistics relating to this class of banks,
the Comptroller is enabled to present the latest statistical data
showing the growth of the school savings bank system in this country.
Much interest is now being manifested in this method of accumu-
lating small savings, and recently the American Bankers' Association
provided for a school savings section, in charge of a capable secretary,
for the purpose of studying the growth of this movement and compiling
statistics relating thereto.
From reports received and compiled it appears that there are
about 1,200 schools in 201 cities and towns having school savings
banks. The pupils registered at these schools number 1,492,789,
and the number of pupils with savings accounts are 210,320. The
total amount deposited was $4,305,018.83, withdrawn $3,143,551.22,
the balance on deposit being $1,161,467.61. . . .
Postal Savings Banks
Number
of offices
and branches
Number of
depositors
Deposits
Average
deposit
account
Average
deposit per
inhabitant
12,820
330*703
$33,818,870
$102.26
$0.35
B. Building and Loan Associations, i8gj ^
A characteristic and important savings and investment institution in the
United States is the building and loan association, whose purpose is to assist the
person of small means to acquire a home by loaning him the necessary capital on
the security of a mortgage on the property. The following extract shows something
of the financial and social importance of these associations.
* Ninth A nntial Report of the Commissioner of Labor.
(Washincton. iSo4^. 1I1
ECONOMIC PROGRESS 841
Building and loan associations have existed in this country since
about 1840, although the first organization of the kind of which there
is any record was organized at Frankford, a suburb of Philadelphia,
January 3, 1831, under the title of the Oxford Provident Building
Association; but the decade from 1840 to 1850 can be considered as
being the real period for the permanent inception of such asso-
ciations. . . .
The growth of these associations in the United States has been
very rapid since 1840, and their accumulated assets have increased
to an enormous amount. These private corporations, doing a semi-
banking business, conducted by men not trained as bankers, offer a
study in finance not equalled by any other institutions. England,
France, and some other countries have kindred institutions, but
nowhere have they grown to such vast proportions as in the United
States.
The investigation, the results of which are now under considera-
tion, comprehends practically all building and loan associations in
the United States. An effort was made to secure the facts for these
associations as they existed at the end of their respective fiscal years
nearest to January i, 1893. . . .
The number of associations considered in the preparation of the
tabular statements in this report was 5,838, of which 5,598 were local
and 240 national. ...
General Results for the United States
Number of associations " T S>838
Total shareholders in associations rejxnting 1,745,725
Total dues and profits $450,667,594
Average dues and profits per shareholder in associa-
tions reporting $257
Average size of loans in associations reporting $1,120
Homes acquired in associations reporting 3^4,755
The total dues paid in on instalment shares in force plus the profits
on the same of the building and loan associations of the country, as
stated, amount to $450,667,594. A business represented by this
great sum, conducted quietly, with little or no advertising, and, as
stated, without the experienced banker in charge, shows that the
common people, in their own ways, are quite competent to take care
of their savings, especially when it is known that but 35 of the asso-
ciations now in existence showed a net loss at the end of their last
fiscalyear and that this loss. amounted to only $23,332.20. . . .
842 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
V. Social Well-being
A. Improvement of Conditions during the Nineteenth Century , i88$ ^
The general industrial and social advance achieved in the United States during
the first three quarters of the nineteenth century, in which the laboring class shared,
is here set forth. While it may be acknowledged that the average worker to-day
enjoys more comforts and has a higher standard of living than his grandfather or
great-grandfather was able to command, this does not determine the question as
to whether labor has shared equally with capital in the general advance.
During the early years of the century, then, we find little mechani-
cal skill, and crude and imperfect machines. Muscle was essential
to the workman, and what he accomplished was secured by purely
manual, frequently monotonous and irksome labor, resulting in a
product generally substantial, but often clumsy, and exhibiting, as
a rule, little economy in the use of material or science in the adjust-
ment of its parts. If the absence of machinery was a blessing to the
laborer, then in that respect the early American artisan was in an
ideal state.
HOURS OF LABOR
The hours of labor in nearly all industries were measured by the
sun, from sunrise to sunset constituting the working day. Not until
1824 was the subject of shorter hours agitated, and not until 1840
were shorter hours adopted to any extent; it was several years after
that date before ten hours became the rule in the mechanic trades,
while in the textile industries the ten hour system is a modern inno-
vation, as yet adopted only in Massachusetts, so far as America is
concerned.
HOUSEHOLD COMFORTS POSSESSED BY THE LABORER
Laborers at the beginning of the century had few of the comloris
and conveniences now common in the poorest families. China, glass-
ware, and carpets, to say nothing of the numberless contrivances now
in use for facilitating household labor, were then practically out of
reach. Dwellings were warmed by open fires of wood, while churches
were not warmed at all. The iron cook stove for economically and
efficiently aiding the culinary operations of the family had not yet
appeared. Anthracite coal, though for fifteen years in use on black-
* History of Wages and Prices in Massachusetts: 1752-1883. Sixteenth Annual
Rqx>rt of the Massachusetts Bureau of Statistics of Labor, Parts III and IV
(Boston, 1885), 10-15.
ECONOMIC PROGRESS 843
smiths' forges in the coal region, was unavailable for household
purposes, and in 1806 the first freightage of a few hundred bushels
was brought down to Philadelphia, and there used experimentally
with indifferent success.
The artisan's food was simple, often coarse, and in fact confined
to the bare necessities of life. The wide range of products which now
enrich the workingman's table, brought to him from all the markets
of the world by the modern system of rapid transportation, were many
of them unknown, or if known were expensive luxuries only obtain-
able by the favored few.
"Among the fruits and vegetables of which no one had then even
heard, are cantaloupes, many varieties of peaches and pears, tomatoes
and rhubarb, sweet corn, the cauliflower, the egg plant, head lettuce,
and okra.
"If the food of an artisan would now be thought coarse, his clothes
would be thought abominable. A pair of yellow buckskin or leathern
breeches, a checked shirt, a red flannel jacket, a rusty felt hat cocked
up at the corners, shoes of neat's skin set off with huge buckles of
brass, and a leathern apron, comprised his scanty wardrobe." ^
The wealthy and more genteel wore silks, velvets and broad-
cloth of foreign manufacture, but the laboring classes were confined to
coarse fabrics of home production.
EDUCATIONAL AND SOCIAL ADVANTAGES
At the beginning of the century the educational advantages sur-
rounding the workingman were few. Although common schools were
early established in Massachusetts, yet judged by modern standards
they were poor indeed. Hard by the church stood the school, but
hard by the school on every village green stood, through all the early
years, the gallows, stocks, and whipping post, and within, the rooms
were bare and unattractive, and unprovided with apparatus for aiding
the teacher's work. In school government the rod played an im-
portant part. . . .
The opportunities for social enjoyment were no broader. An ex-
tensive inquiry into the social life of workingmen at the present day,
undertaken by the Bureau in 1879,^ showed the existence in Massa-
chusetts of large numbers of social, farmers', and mechanics' clubs;
^ McMaster. A History of the People of the United States. Vol. i, p. 97.
2 See Eleventh Annual Report, pp. 239-293.
844 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
base ball, rowing, and sailing clubs; secret societies offering social
opportunities to members; literary and debating societies; musical
societies; halls for dancing, billiard rooms, and bowling alleys, and
other avenues of enjoyment practically open to all and utilized by
a considerable number. A similar inquiry at any time during the
first quarter of the century would have disclosed few such social in-
stitutions. The industrial population was too much diffused, the
character of the labor too severe, and the hours of labor too long to
permit of their existence.
It is frequently said that there were fewer class distinctions and
greater social equality in early New England life than now. This is
undoubtedly true if by social equaHty is meant equality of condition.
But the same causes that have operated to separate society into classes
have, as we shall show, placed at the command of the manual workman
opportunities for mental growth and social enjoyment unknown to
the most favored in the early days. These opportunities have
become his permanent possession. They constitute his environment.
In modern society not only are all classes united by ties which cannot
be broken except through revolution, and each class dependent upon
every other to a degree never before known, but the social privileges
of the present are open to the many and can no longer be monopolized
by the few.
MEANS OF TRANSPORTATION. FACILITIES POSSESSED BY THE
WORKINGMAN FOR CHANGING HIS LOCATION
Transportation upon water was confined to sailing vessels, and
upon land to wagons. The roads were very poor, although after
1800 the construction of turnpikes improved the means of communica-
tion between the larger towns. These were introduced by corpora-
tions, at first operated as toll roads, and finally assumed by the
towns.
Canals, primitive in construction and crudely operated, were
coming to be relied upon as avenues of internal commerce. These
afterward reached a high point of development until superseded by
the railway. Neither upon sea nor land in 1800 was steam employed
in transportation. . . .
The postal service was insufficient and far from rapid, while the
rates were extremely high. Nine different rates were established in
1792, varying from six cents for thirty miles to twenty-five for four
hundred and fifty miles and over, and this schedule continued in
force for many years. Missives were as frequently sent by private
ECONOMIC PROGRESS 845
carriers as otherwise and sometimes weeks would elapse in the transit
between places no farther apart than Boston and Philadelphia. On
the average each person in the country, for the period of five years
ending with 1799, sent but ly^ missives by the mails, while for the
single year 1875 the average was 23^ per person, or at the rate of
1171 for five years, and the use of the mails has since increased, and
is increasing. Nothing could better show the change in public im-
portance of the mail service than the enormous increase here indicated.
The railroad, telegraph, and telephone are all comparatively
modern inventions. By means of steam and electricity London,
Liverpool, and San Francisco are to-day nearer Boston for all prac-
tical business purposes than were New York or Philadelphia at any
time prior to 1820.
The comparative isolation of business centres and the lack of facili-
ties for rapid communication between them materially affected the
condition of the wage laborer. The risks of business were greater,
and no industry could be considered permanent when it was impos-
sible to forecast the state of the market; for instance, the manufac-
turer in Massachusetts was for weeks ignorant of affairs in centres of
distribution like Philadelphia which might materially affect the price
of his product. All commerce and manufacturing were then of the
nature of a venture, and the labor dependent upon industrial opera-
tions thus limited remained more or less uncertain of employment.
The same conditions which prevented the free and rapid exchange
of products, raised the price and Hmited the variety of articles for
household consumption, except such supplies as eggs, corn and rye
meal, etc., which could be easily and cheaply procured on the farms
near the consumer; and, beyond all, the laborer could not easily
change his environment. Once located it was difficult for him to
remove to other industrial neighborhoods, and this frequently operated
to his disadvantage by Umiting his employment and reducing his
wage.
WAGES, AND THE PURCHASING POWER OF MONEY
A system of barter was common in business transactions. Money
was scarce and wages were frequently paid in groceries or clothing,
or in orders for such commodities, the orders passing from hand to
hand as currency. Of actual money the workingmen had little, and,
when cash became absolutely necessary, they were often obliged to
change store orders therefor at considerable discount.
Employers kept stores of groceries, clothing, boots and shoes,
846 READINGS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY
hats, and particularly liquors and tobacco, and it is evident from the
inspection of old account books that a liberal share of the wages of
labor was paid in rum and gin.
B. Condition of Workers, igoz ^
In the Fall of 1902 Mr. A. Mosely, a British manufacturer, brought a group
of twenty-three English workingmen, chosen by the leading unions of England, to
this country to investigate conditions of industry. On their return home, each
delegate made a report, which were published in book f-:rm. The following extract
is taken from the preface by Mr. Mosely.
. . . My personal conclusion is that the true-born American is
a better educated, better housed, better fed, better clothed, and
more energetic man than his British brother, and infinitely more
sober; as a natural consequence, he is more capable of using his
brains as well as his hands. Many of the men, however, holding
leading positions are either English or Scotch, and the American
himself is justly proud of his British descent.
One of the principal reasons why the American workman is better
than the Britisher is that he has received a sounder and better edu-
cation, whereby he has been more thoroughly fitted for the struggles
of after life; . . .
In my previous trips to America I had been forcibly struck by
the up-to-date methods of production there, both from a business
standpoint and as regards the equipment of their workshops. The
manufacturers there do not hesitate to put in the very latest machinery
at whatever cost, and from time to time to sacrifice large sums by
scrapping the old whenever improvements are brought out. One
man in charge of a large department said to me: "One of the reasons
of our success is the readiness of all our men to drop existing modes
of production as soon as it is demonstrated that there is something
better." Labour-saving machinery is widely used everywhere and
is encouraged by the unions and welcomed by the men, because ex-
perience has shown them that in reality machinery is their best friend.
It saves the workman enormous manual exertion, raises his wages,
tends towards a higher standard of life, and, further, rather creates
work than reduces the number of hands employed. . . .
My own observations lead me to believe that the average American
manufacturer runs his machinery at a much higher speed than is
* Mosdy Industrial Commission to the United States of America, Oct.-Dec.
jgo2. RqMrts of the Delegates (London, 1903), 6-9, passim.
ECONOMIC PROGRESS 847
the usual practice in England — in other words, for "all it is worth,"
and the men ably second the employers' efforts in this direction. . . /
How is it that the American manufacturer can afford to pay
wages 50 per cent, 100 per cent, and even more in some instances,
above ours, and yet be able to compete successfully in the markets
of the world? The answer is to be found in small economies such as
mentioned above, which escape the ordinary eye.
That the American workman earns higher wages is beyond ques-
tion. As a consequence, the average married man owns the house he
lives in, which not only gives him a stake in the country, but saves
payment of rent, enabling him either to increase his savings or to
purchase further comforts.
Food is as cheap (if not cheaper) in the United States as in England,
whilst general necessaries may, I think, be put on the same level.
Rent, clothes made to order, and a variety of things, including all
luxuries, are considerably dearer. Luxuries, however, do not enter
very much into the every day consumption of the average working
man in this country, and if in the United States he can get them at
all (even though he have to pay a high price for them) that is surely
an advantage by comparison.
The American workman drinks but little, and his house is usually
well furnished and fitted with luxuries in the way of bathrooms,
laundries, hot water and heating systems, and other items mostly
unknown to the British workman.
One of the points the delegates were invited to investigate was
whether or not the workman in the United States "wears out" faster
than the Englishman. Personally, I think not. It is generally ad-
mitted that the American workman, in consequence of labour saving
machines and the excellence of the factory organisation, does not need
to put forth any greater effort in his work than is the case here, if as
much. ... In American factories, speaking generally, great atten-
tion is paid to the necessities and comfort of the workers. Separate
lockers (of which the workman has the key) are provided for working
clothing; consequently the man can arrive at and leave his work well
clad, changing at the factory. The shops are usually very well venti-
lated, although it is customary to keep them at a temperature many
degrees above the average in this country. . . .
One point that has struck me with enormous force, as I believe
it has all the delegates, is the close touch and sympathy between
master and man, which is carried a step further in the enlistment
of the men's good offices to "improve factory methods. . . .
848 READINGS IN ECONOMIC fflSTORY
VI. Conservation of Resources
A. Conservation of Natural Resources, igog ^
In any estimate of the economic progress of the people of the United States
we must take account of the amount and fertility of the soil, and of the stores
of metallic and mineral and forest wealth at the disposal of the people, for uF)on
these will depend in large measure their future development. It had generally
been assumed that the supplies along all these Unes were practically inexhaustible,
but in 1908 a national commission, appointed by President Roosevelt to investi-
gate the subject, sounded a note of warning concerning our wasteful methods
and urged more careful conservation of our natural resources.
The land area of the United States, excluding Alaska and the in-
sular possessions, is about 3,000,000 square miles, or 1,920,000,000
acres. Of this area over half is arable, and a little less than half
is occupied as farm land. About one-fourth is forest and one-
eighth sparse wood land and cut-over land. Two-fifths is arid
or semi-arid, generally requiring irrigation; one twenty-fifth is
swamp and overflow land requiring drainage. Most of the dry,
wet, and sparsely wooded lands, with part of the forest area, is
adapted to grazing.
About two- thirds of the land has passed into private holdings.
Of the original 1,920,000,000 acres there remained July i, 1908,
387,000,000 acres open to entry; nearly all of this is arid or other-
wise unsuitable for settlement by families. There are also about
235,000,000 acres in national forests, national parks, and other lands
reserved for public use. . . .
The population of the United States in 1900 was 76,303,387;
probably it will double by the middle and triple before the end of
the present century. In view of this growth, the question of food
supply assumes the highest importance. How shall the greatly
augmented demand for foodstuffs be met? Can sufficient food be
obtained from our own soil or will it become necessary to ini[)ort, and,
if we import, how shall we find the means? . . .
Aside from the importation of foodstuffs, but one feasible way
of meeting our growing demand appears — i.e., to increase our crop
yields. That this is not only feasible but entirely practicable is
shown by the larger yields of long-settled countries, by the reclamation
of abandoned farms with increasing local population, by the general
increase in our crop yield during the last decade, and by the natural
tendency of soils to increase in fertility when properly treated. . . .
• Report of the National Conservation Commission. 60th Cong., ad scss., Sen.
Doc. No. 676 (Washington, 1909), 43-1 "1 Passim.
ECONOMIC PROGRESS 849
Aside from careless or ignorant farming and such hostile climatic
conditions as storms and droughts, the most serious enemies to crops
are noxious insects and mammals. . . .
The total annual losses to the agriculture of the country, includ-
ing live stock, animal products, and grain in storage, from insects,
mammals, and disease is estimated at $1,142,000,000, or one-sixth of
the total production. . . .
Our stock of water is like other resources in that its quantity is
limited. It differs from such mineral resources as coal and iron,
which once used are gone forever, in that the supply is perpetual;
and it differs from such resources as soils and forests, which are
capable of renewal or increase (provided the supply of water suffices),
in that its quantity can not be augmented. It differs also in that
its relative quantity is too small to permit full development of other
resources and of the population and industries depending on them.
Like all other resources, it may be better utilized. It must be better
utilized in order to derive full benefit from lands and forests and
mines. . . .
The first requisite for waterway improvement is control of the
waters in such manner as to reduce floods and regulate the regimen
of the navigable rivers; the second is development of terminals and
connections in such manner as to regulate commerce.
Most of the headwaters, especially in mountainous regions, may
be so controlled by forestation as to diminish floods and ameliorate
low waters, and at the same time clarify streams required for water
supply and augment the subsurface reservoir of ground water. . . .
Forests not only grow timber but they hold the soil and they con-
serve the streams. They abate the wind and give protection from
excessive heat or cold. Woodlands make for the fiber, health, and
happiness of each citizen and of the nation.
The fish which live in forest waters furnish each year $21,000,000
worth of food, and not less than half as much is furnished by 'the
game which could not exist without the forest. ...
Our forests now cover 550,000,000 acres, or about one-fourth
of the United States. The original forests covered not less than
850,000,000 acres. . . .
The yearly growth of wood in our forests does not average more
than 12 cubic feet per acre. This gives a total yearly growth of less
than 7,000,000,000 cubic feet. . . .
Since 1870 forest fires have each year destroyed an average of fifty
lives and $50,000,000 worth of timber. Not less than 50,000,000
850 READINGS IN ECONOlVaC HISTORY
acres of forest are burned over yearly. The young growth destroyed
by fire is worth far more than the merchantable timber burned. . . .
We take from our forests each year, not counting the loss by fire,
three and one-half times their yearly growth. We take 40 cubic feet
per acre for each 12 cubic feet grown; we take 260 cubic feet per
capita, while Germany uses 3 7 cubic feet and France 25 cubic feet. . . .
We should stop forest fires. By careful logging we should both
reduce waste and leave cut-over lands productive. We should make
the timber logged go further by preservative treatment and by avoid-
ing needless loss in the woods, the mill, the factory, and in use. We
should plant up those lands now treeless which will be most useful
under forest. We should so adjust taxation that cut-over lands can
be held for a second crop. We should recognize that it costs to grow
timber as well as to log and saw it. . . .
Under right management our forests will yield over four times
as much as now. We can reduce waste in the woods and in the mill
at least one-third, with present as well as future profit. We can
perpetuate the naval-stores industry. Preservative treatment will
reduce by one-fifth the quantity of timber used in the water or in the
ground. We can practically stop forest fires at a total yearly cost
of one-fifth the value of the standing timber burned each year.
We shall suffer for timber to meet our needs until our forests have
had time to grow again. But if we act vigorously and at once we
shall escape permanent timber scarcity. . . .
The annual products of the mines of the United States now exceed
$2,000,000,000 in value. They contribute 65 per cent of the freight
traffic of the country. The industry employs over a million men at
the mines, and twice that number in handling, transporting, and
manufacturing the products.
The waste or losses in the mining, preparation, and use of the
mineral products is estimated to exceed $1,500,000 per day.
The available and accessible commercial coal in the United States
aggregates approximately 1,400,000,000,000 tons. At the present
increasing rate of production this will be depleted and will approach
exhaustion before the middle of the next century; and the additional
1,600,000,000,000 tons of inferior coal and lignite not now available
economically will approach exhaustion before the end of the next
century.
The known supplies of high-grade iron ores in the United States
approximate 4,788,150,000 tons, which at the present increasing rate
of consumption can not be expected to last beyond the middle of the
ECONOMIC PROGRESS 851
present century. There are also estimated to be 75,116,070,000 tons
of low-grade iron ores which may hereafter be available.
The known supplies of petroleum, natural gas, and high-grade
phosphate rock can not be expected to supply the nation's needs
through the present century.
The losses from fire in the United States during 1907 were approx-
imately $450,000,000, of which some $400,000,000 was preventable
waste. ...
The extension of the supply of our more important mineral re-
sources is absolutely essential to the future welfare of the nation.
How to accomplish this is a problem demanding the consideration
of the best science and statesmanship the country affords.
First of all is the prevention of unnecessary waste; and for
this the individual and the State and Federal governments must
cooperate.
All unscientific or inefficient use of resources is waste; and the
most important element in conservation is the fact that the necessary
waste of to-day may, through inquiry or research or through economic
conditions, become the avoidable waste of to-morrow. . . .
The duration of our mineral resources may be still further extended
through investigations looking toward the substitution of common
mineral substances for those which more rapidly approach exhaustion
because of their rarity or greater importance, as, for example, the sub-
stitution of concrete for structural steel; of low-grade coals or lignite
for those of higher grade; and of water power for steam.
Furthermore, in the case of certain supplies which are now being
largely exported, or in the use of which waste is excessive, the duration
may be extended for domestic use through such ownership or control
as will prevent both sending out of the country and unnecessary waste.
Again, the prevention of waste, and hence the extension of the
life of supplies, may be secured through such increase in the price of
materials as will render practicable their more complete extraction
and efficient use. . . .
B. National Vitality: Its Wastes and Conservation, igog ^
In discussions of conservation attention has usually been directed only to
the problem of safeguarding and rationally using the natural resources of the
country. But the development of the human resources is even more import-
ant. The importance of preventing disease and accident, of increasing vitaHty,
^ Report of the National Conservation Commission. 60th Cong., 2d Sess., Sen.
Doc. No. 676 (Washington), 623.
852 READINGS IN ECONOMIC fflSTORY
and of prolonging life were emphasized in a report made by Professor Irving
Fisher to the National Conservation Commission. The desirability of further
development and training of the human resources by means of education has
already been emphasized in earlier readings.
The problem of conserving natural resources is only one part of
the larger problem of conserving national efficiency. The other
part relates to the vitality of our population. The two parts are
closely interwoven. Protection against mining accidents, forest
fires, floods, or pollution of streams prevents not only loss of property,
but loss of Hfe. The prevention of disease, on the other hand, increases
economic productivity.
So far as we can compare vital and physical assets as measured
by earning power, the vital assets are three to five times the physical.
The facts show that there is as great room for improvement in our
vital resources as in our lands, waters, minerals, and forests. This
improvement is possible in respect both to the length of life and to
freedom from disease during life.
Contrary to common impression, there is no iron law of mortality.
Recent statistics for India show that the average duration of life
there is less than twenty-five years. In Sweden it is over fifty years,
in Massachusetts forty-five years. The length of life is increasing
wherever sanitary science and preventive medicine are applied. In
India it is stationary. In Europe it has doubled in three and a half
centuries. The rate of increase during the seventeenth and eighteenth
centuries was about four years per century, during the first half of
the nineteenth century about nine years per century, during the latter
half of the nineteenth century about seventeen years per century, and
in Germany, where medical and sanitary science has reached the high-
est development, about twenty-seven years per century. The only
comparative statistics available in this country are for Massachusetts,
where life is lengthening at the rate of about fourteen years per cen-
tury, or half the rate in Germany.
There is no need, however, of waiting a century for this increase.
It could be obtained within a generation. Three-fourths of tubercu-
losis, from which 150,000 Americans die annually, could be avoided.
Eighteen experts in various diseases, as well as vital statisticians, have
contributed data on the ratio of preventability of the ninety different
causes of death into which mortality may be classified. From these
data it is found that fifteen years at least could be at once added to
the average human lifetime by applying the science of preventing
disease. More than li.ilf of this additional life would conu' from the
ECONOMIC PROGRESS 853
prevention of tuberculosis, typhoid, and five other diseases, the pre-
vention of which could be accomplished by purer air, water, and milk.
In Lawrence, Mass., after the installation of a pure- water supply, the
death rate from typhoid was reduced by 80 per cent. For every
death thus saved from typhoid, two or three deaths are saved from
other diseases.
Judging from the English statistics of illness, we must conclude
that at all times in the United States about 3,000,000 persons are
seriously ill, of whom about 500,000 are consumptives. Fully half of
this illness is preventable.
If we appraise each life lost at only $1,700 and each year's average
earnings for adults at only $700, the economic gain to be obtained from
preventing preventable disease, measured in dollars, exceeds one and
a half billions. This gain, or the lengthening and strengthening of
life which it measures, can be secured through medical investigation
and practice, school and factory hygiene, restriction of labor of women
and children, the education of the public in both public and private
hygiene, and through improving the efficiency of our municipal,
state, and national health service. Our National Government has
now several bureaus exercising health functions, which only need to
be concentrated under one department to become coordinated parts
of a greater health service worthy of the nation.
%
^A
INDEX
Agriculture, methods of (1650), 11;
(1775), 31; (1790), 235; (1816),
343; of Indians, 28; in New
England, 29-32; in New York,
32; in New Jersey, 34; in Vir-
ginia, 35, 37, 221, 222; in North
CaroHna, 41, 228; disorganized
by Revolution, 219; inefficient
(1792), 220; George Washington
on, 221, 223; in Maryland, 222;
in Georgia, 228; and the tariff,
313-316, 320; products of, 344,
480-484; English and American
compared, 464-467; progress in,
469; societies for, 469; of the
North, 476-479, 567-571; of the
South, 476-479, 567-571, 578-
582, 605-608, 620, 627-629; ex-
ports in, 598-601, 616; laborers in,
608; foreigners in, 609-613; dry
farming in, 624-627.
American characteristics, 268-271,
338-347, 542-545, 846-847.
American Federation of Labor, 799;
membership of, 801.
Balance of trade, theory, 128;
between England and the colo-
nies, 166; of the United States,
424-426, 600.
Bank, Land, loi; First United
States, 485-493; Second United
States, 493-499; trust companies
and, 707-709; postal savings, 683;
deposits in, 838; savings, 839;
school savings, 840.
Banking, and the Bubble Act in
Massachusetts (1741), loi; in
United States (1791), 487; state,
490-493; and panics, 501-503;
wildcat, 507; Suffolk system of,
508, 509; safety fund system of,
509, 510; free, 510-515, 700-
704 ; national, 700-7 1 1 .
Bounties, on colonial products, 127,
142.
Building and loan associations, 839,
840.
Canals, proposals for building, 386-
387; location of, 390-392, 407;
compared with railroads, 396-406;
rates on, 401-406.
Capital, invested in cotton industry,
278-279, 283, 287; woolen in-
dustry, 282, 295; manufacture of
machinery, 282; earnings of, 819.
Carrying-trade, of New England
(1761), 72-73; of New York, 75;
colonial, regulated by Navigation
Acts, II 8-1 21; profitableness of,
during Napoleonic Wars, 207,
209 (table); frauds of neutral,
210; injured by British and
French decrees, 212; and the
tariff, 316-319; decline of, 318;
development of (1821-1860), 432
(table); (1860-1910), 651-652
(table).
Cattle, 13, 15, 31, 37, 39, 41, 223,
235-236, 359-360.
Character of people, in New York
(1759), 112; in Virginia, 113;
in United States (1816), 269-271;
(1817-1860), 338-342; (1820),
353-355; (1832), 367; (1837),
855
8s6
INDEX
356; (i860), 542-545; (1902),
846-847.
Cities, growth of, 358, 362; (1790-
1880), 780-781; concentration of
population in (1880-1910), 781-
783; of immigrants in, 788.
Coin, scarcity of, in colonies, 104;
in West, 248.
Coinage, history of (i 791-1840),
520-522; of silver (1873- 1893),
711-714, 722-726.
Colonization, cost of, i ; of Plymouth
plantation, 3, 4, 9; in New Nether-
lands, 11; of West India Co.
13; in Maryland, 14; in
Carolina, 15-17; in Georgia, 19;
Franklin on, 20; purposes of, 144.
Commerce, foreign, in colonies, 43-
52, 69-81; of United (i 783-181 2),
185-218; (1800-1860), 413-445;
(i860- 1 909), 644-655; more profit-
able than manufactures (1787),
200; legislation on, 418-421; of
New York, 433-445 (tables); of
Boston, 435, 436 (tables); of New
Orleans, 436-438. See Carrying-
trade, Exports, Imports, Trade.
Communism, of the Rappites, 537-
539; of the Owenites, 539-541;
of the Associations, 541-542.
Compensation, workman's, 805; fed-
eral, 806.
Conservation, of natural resources,
848-851; of life, 852-853.
Constitution, economic reasons for,
197-200.
Corn (Indian), method of cultivat-
ing, by Indians, 29; production
of, in colonies, 30, 32; in Virginia
(1787), 221; importance of, 347,
636-^39; exportation of, 442-445
(Uble).
Cost of living (1698), 82; (1802),
271; (1817), 348; (1910), 810.
Cotton, growth of, 224, 566; kinds,
225; gin, invention of, 226;
effect of gin upon export of, 227,
599; manufactures of, 263, 283
(table), 285-293, 746-751; con-
sumption of, 296, 747; impor-
tance of, 637; manufactures of,
in the South, 750.
Currency, in colonies, 97-99, 146,
i75~i79, 484; depreciation of,
177, 490-493; movement of, 516-
519; emission of, 691-700; elas-
ticity provided for, 709-711;
kinds of, 727-728. See Banking,
Coinage, Money, Paper Money,
Silver.
Debt, federal, 424, 425, 487; state,
522, 523 (table).
Drink, 834, 847. See Intemperance.
Education, 273, 829, 843.
Embargo, 214, 419, 424; effect on
commerce of, 215, 216.
Erie Canal, route to the West, 361;
effects of, on internal improve-
ments, 390-392.
Expenditures, of the government,
687-689; of individuals, 828-838;
of a normal family, 829, 832; of a
self-supporting woman, 831; ex-
travagant, 834; for drink, 835;
for luxury, 836; for amusement,
837.
Exports, colonial, 51-52 (tables),
133 (table); from New Hamp-
shire, 43; from New York, 45,
75-77; from Pennsylvania, 46,
78; from Maryland, 47, 80;
from Virginia, 48, 80; from North
Carolina, 48; from South Caro-
lina, 49; from Southern colonies,
69, 132-133. 325; from New Eng-
land, 70, 71, 74; from Georgia,
81; regulated by Navigation
Acts, 1 26 ; from the United States
(1791-1816), 209 (table), 314, 325;
(1800-1860), 414 (table), 416,
417 (tables), 438 (table), 442-
445 (table), 477 (tables), 57o-57i;
(1860-1915), 598-601, 616. See
Trade, foreign.
Factories, description of, at Lowell,
289, 531, 537; at Waltham, 529-
531; at Lynn, 529-531; at Man-
chester, 535; number of (1849-
1909), 745; in the South, 751.
Farms, yield of, 484; size of, 602,
616 (table), 629 (table), 634;
number of, 614-617.
Fish, 6, 9, 34, 43.
Fishing, in New England, 58, 74;
advantages of American, 60.
Food, in colonies, 1 1 1 ; unwholesome
(1797), 272; prices of (1817),
348; (1910), 810, 830, 831;
better, demanded by workingmen,
828, 843; waste of, 837.
Frontier, population of, 356-357;
lines ( 1 830-1 860), 369-375; dis-
appearance of, 779.
Fruits, 15, 31, 33, 38, 599, 637.
Fur trade, 57.
Georgia, settlement of, 19; objec-
tions to prohibition of rum and
slaves in, 92.
Gold reserve, accumulation of, 696-
700.
Greenbacks, quantity and nature of,
691-693, 727-728; the issue of,
criticized, 693-695; fluctuation
in the value of, 696; redemption
of, 696-700. See Paper money.
Hogs, 13, 30, 40, 235, 237, 35Q-360.
Houses, colonial (1650), 12; pioneer
(1790), 235, 236; architecture of,
341 ; higher standards in, 828, 842 ;
INDEX 857
acquired through building and
loan associations, 841.
Immigrants, opportunities for, in
the West, 234-235; number of,
in agriculture, 608-613; distri-
bution of, 786, 788; country of
origin of, 787; concentration in
cities of, 788.
Immigration, to colonies urged, 1-4,
6-22; effect of, on growth of popu-
lation, 107; extent and character
of, 439, (1820-1860), 550-558;
(1882-1910), 783-790; causes of,
784; legislation concerning, 789-
792.
Imports, colonial, 43-50, passim, 51-
52 (tables), 69, 132-133; into
Virginia, 69; into New York, 75,
423; affected by Navigation Acts,
128; from England into Southern
colonies, 132; into New England,
133 (table); into United States,
280, 413-414 (table), 421-426.
Income, distribution of national
(1850-1910), 822-827.
Independent Treasury, arguments
for, 503-507.
Indians, trade with, i; agriculture
of, 28.
Industries, colonial (1721), 42-51;
extractive, 53-61 ; localization of,
boots and shoes, 277, 301-303;
cotton goods, 282; woolen goods,
282; machinery, 282; clothing,
305; collars, 305; rubber goods,
307; watches, 307-308; musical
instruments, 307.
Inheritance, New England laws on,
22.
Intemperance, 271, 273, 834. See
Drink.
Interest, rates of, 820, 824-826.
Internal improvements, federal aid
for, 385-390; and the national
8s8
INDEX
defense, 385-388; in the West,
390-392; arguments for and
against, 396-401 ; development
of, 401-406.
Iron (and steel) manufactures of,
260, 279-281, 283 (table), 297-
300, 752-755 (table).
Irrigation, importance of, 622-624.
Labor, scarcity of, in colonies, 82;
condition of, no, 229, 237, 524-
528, 792, 846-847; and the tariff,
313-316; hours of, 534-535
(table), 794, 842; organizations
of, 795-801; legislation concern-
ing, 801-808; share of, in net
product of industry, 815-819;
share of, in national income, 824-
826.
Lakes, traffic on, 384, 407, 440,
655-^59; rates on, 401-406.
Land, head rights of colonists to,
3, 16; advice on granting, 23;
grants of, by governors, 24; grants
of, in Pennsylvania, 25; methods
of granting, 26; sales of, 27, 238,
239 (table) ; free, attracted settlers
to West, 234, 604; small holdings
of, 237; speculation in public,
238, 458-464, 500; grants of, to
states, 414-415, 450; extent and
importance of public, 446-455,
616; proceeds from sale of, 448,
455, 456; and wages, 455-457;
price of, 457, 481, 571-572, 603,
613-622, 631, 635; tenure of,
601-608, 627-629; grants of, in
the West, 640-643.
Legal Tender Act, criticism of,
693^5-
Live-stock. See Cattle, Hogs, Sheep.
Lumber, in the colonies, 42-43, 46,
49. 53* 70-72, 74, 76-78, 80; on
the Mississippi, 357-358; manu-
facture of, 743.
Machinery, invention of, 267 ; intro-
duction of cotton, 287, 288, 747-
751; agricultural, 280, 297, 467-
476, 622; introduction of woolen,
295; value of (i860), 299; in
factories, 528-537, 745.
Manners, 112, 113, 269-271, 338-
342.
Manufactures (1721), 43-46; (1732)
60-65; (1765), 158; (1840), 283;
in Massachusetts, 43; in Penn-
sylvania, 46; in New York, 65-66;
in New England, 68; of iron pro-
hibited in colonies, 139; few, for
sale (1775), 252; obstacles to
development of, 253, 310, 339;
after the Revolution, 254, 255;
protection asked for, 256, 309 ff.;
Hamilton's report on, 257-266;
of iron, 260, 279-282, 297-300,
752-755; of cotton, 263, 278-279,
283, 285-293, 747-751; of wool-
ens, 264, 293-296, 743; of leather,
277, 300-303, 743; of printing
presses, 303-304; of se\\'ing ma-
chines, 304-305; of flour and
meal, 305-306, 743; of India
rubber goods, 307; of furniture,
307, 743; of watches, 308; pro-
gress of (1793), 266; (1810), 277;
(1840), 283; (i860), 282; (1850-
1880), 740; decline of (1795), 267;
household, 260-268, 279; Galla-
tin's report on, 276-282; geo-
graphical distribution of, 277,
302, 304-308, 742-744, 746, 751;
value of (1840), 283; (i860), 282,
291, 297, 299, 301, 304, 306;
(1900), 618; (1850-1880), 740,
743; (1850-1910), 745; in the
West, 357; conditions favorable
to, 73Q-
Market, retail, 105; colonies a, for
British manufactures, 132; west-
em, 248; wholesale, 303.
INDEX
859
Mercantilism, 11 5-1 17.
Merchant marine (i 789-181 5), 208
(table); (1821-1860), 427-431,
432 (table); (1860-1910), 651-655.
Mining, value of the product of,
282, 753-
Molasses Act (1733), arguments
relative to, 134; ineffectiveness
of, 136, 152.
Money, commodity, in colonies, 97;
tobacco as, in Virginia, 98; paper,
99, 146-147, 175, 177, 179, 485,
493-495; scarcity of, in West,
248. See Banking, Coin, Coinage,
Currency, Gold reserve. Green-
backs, Paper money. Silver.
Naval stores, 54.
Navigation. See Trade, Commerce.
Navigation act (1660), 118; (1663),
120; approved, 120; objections
to, 122-123; criticized by Adam
Smith, 124; enumeration of arti-
cles in, 125; purpose of, 129;
evaded, 138; enforcement of,
148-15 1, 154-155, 160; opposi-
tion to, 155, 160-161; defended,
162-164.
Non-importation agreements, 168,
170; lead to petition for reconcilia-
tion by London merchants, 171;
by West India planters, 173.
Non-intercourse Act, 419, 424.
Northern States, agriculture in,
219-221, 47 6-484 ; localization
of manufactures in, 282; com-
merce of, 421-424.
Panics (and crises) (1837), 499-503;
(1873), 729-732; (1884), 732-734;
(1907), 734-737.
Paper money, in colonies defended,
99; prohibited by Parliament,
100, 103, 146; necessity of,
in colonies, 104; remonstrance
against prohibition of, 147; con-
tinental, 175; depreciation of,
177, 493-495; issued by the states
(1781-1788), 179, 485; prohibited
by the Constitution, 486. See
Greenbacks.
Parcel post, proposals for the estab-
lishment of, 683-684.
Patents, on cotton machinery, 227,
289.
Peddler, as a distributor of goods,
249.
Plantations, state of the British
(1721), 42-51.
Plymouth Plantation, articles of
agreement of, 3.
Population, in Pennsylvania (17 21),
46; in Maryland, 46; in South
CaroHna, 49; growth of, in col-
onies, 106; (1752-1756), 108;
growth of, due to large families,
109; in North Carolina (1759),
114; condition of, no, 112, 229,
237, 269-271, 813-847; growth of,
in West, 338, 451; growth of, in
United States, 451-452, 547
(table), 550 (table), 597 (table),
614, 630, 777-779 (table); dis-
tribution of (i860), 545-550, 568-
569; (1880), 779; concentration
of, in cities, 780-783.
Post-office, development of (1791-
1816), 274; (up to 191 1), 682-686;
rates, 275; rural free delivery of,
682-683.
Poverty, among poor whites of
Virginia (1780), 229; unknown in
West, 237, 345; caused by large
fortunes, 820-822.
Prices, of farm products (1731), 39;
(1763), 80; (1817), 348; (1843),
526-527; wholesale (1897-1910),
766, 809 (table); retail (19 10), 810.
Products, colonial (1721), 42-51;
of New Hampshire, 43; of Mas-
86o
INDEX
sachusetts, 43; of New York, 44,
70; of New Jersey, 45, 70; of
Pennsylvania, 46, 70; of Mary-
land, 47, 344; of Virginia, 47, 79,
344, of South Carolina, 49, 344;
of Western and Southern states,
344, 359, 407, 481-484.
Profits, 817, 819, 824-827.
Prosperity, great in colonies, no;
among American laborers, 524-
525; in the United States (1850-
1912), 813-815, 827, 832-847.
Public domain, attracted settlers
to the West, 234, 604; specula-
tion in, 238, 458-464, 500; extent
and character of (1832), 446-455,
616.
Railroads, development of (1830-
1850), 393-395; (i84i-i854),4i5;
( I 850-1 860), 404-406; (1860-
1900), 659-662; first in United
States, 396-406; compared with
canals, 396-406, 844; rates on,
401-406, 662-667.
Rent, 824-826, 831.
Revenues, of the government (i860),
6S9; (1892-1897), 762.
Revolution, of colonies made pos-
sible by conquest of French, 143;
economic causes of, 143-166;
social effects of, 1 81-184.
Rivers, navigation on Western, 379-
385; decline of traffic on, 667-
675; future importance of trafhc
on, 675-680.
Roads, badness of (1810), 241;
(1835), 377-379-
Rum, importation of, into Georgia
prohibited, 92; manufacture of,
afifected by Molasses Act, 135.
Savings, of workingman's family,
833; in banks (i 820-1 913), 838-
840.
Servants, work of, in Maryland
(1655), 14; in South Carolina
(1731), 17; in Pennsylvania
(1748), 84; (1775), 88; in Vir-
ginia (1656), 87.
Sheep, 223, 293, 296.
Ship subsidy, proposals for, 654-655.
Shipbuilding, in Massachusetts, 44,
55; in the United States (1789),
204, 254, 262; cost of, 205.
Shipping, encouraged by Naviga-
tion Act (1660), 118; advantage
to England of colonial, 130; cost
of operation of American (1805),
206; tonnage of (1789-18 15),
208 (table); (1821-1860), 432
(table); (1860-1910), 651-652
(table).
Silver, demonetization of, 711-717;
plea for the free coinage of, 711-
714, 722-725; purchase of, 717-
722; trade dollar, 725-726. See
Money, Currency.
Slavery, unprofitableness of (1774),
96, 560-563, 571-578; decline of
(1788), 231; areas of, 359; effi-
ciency of, 564-571, 579-582.
Slaves (1748), 86; trade in, to Vir-
ginia (1708), 89; request of mis-
sionary for, 91; introduction of,
into Georgia urged, 93; refused,
95; treatment of, 230, 233; number
of (i860), 549; capital invested in,
574-576, 620; living expenses of,
580; rules for managing, 582-594;
internal trade in, 595-597; price
of, 596.
Smuggling, 137-138; interferencr
with, a cause of the Revolution.
161, 165.
Southern States, character of agri
culture in, 221-229, 578-58^.
627-629; slavery in, 229-234;
commerce of, 421-424; absence
of manufactures in, 576-578;
INDEX
86i
farm tenancy in, 605-608; ef-
fect of the Civil War on, 620, 627.
Speculation in land, 238, 458-464,
500.
Stage-coach, travel by (1802), 240;
(1818), 350; (1835,) 376-379-
Stamp Act, 155, 157; efifect in Eng-
land of, 169.
Standard of living (191 o), 827;
of a self-supporting woman, 831.
Steamboat, invention of, 250; effect
of, on river trade, 379-385, 407-
410 (table); on the Great Lakes,
384.
Steamship, development of, 427-
432.
Steel. See Iron.
Sugar Act, (1764), 152.
Tariff acts, colonial, 140; inharmo-
nious, between states (i 783-1 789),
197; protective, urged, 256, 257,
310-316, 333-337, 760, 764; argu-
ments against, 258, 316-323, 327-
332, 757, 761, 765; and wages,
320, 330, 456; the principle of
minimums in, 324, 328, 331; com-
promise, 326, 336; ad valorem
duties in, 328; and reciprocity
treaties, 420-421, operation of,
425-426, 762; changes in (1860-
1882), 756-757; (1883-1897), 758-
763; commission of 1882, 757;
act of 1909, 763; act of 1913,
765.
Taxation, of colonies by England,
155-156; impossible for carrying
on Revolution, 175.
Telegraph, development of, 680-682.
Telephone, development of, 680-
682.
Tobacco, plantation, description of
(1686), 36; cultivation of, 37, 41,
483-484; the staple crop, 38, 47;
export of, 51, 69, 80; growth of,
suppressed in England, 141; de-
cline of, 229.
Trade, domestic, between colonies,
76; prohibited by Navigation
Acts, 127, 150, 152; retail (1748),
105; (i8q6),247; coasting (i 791),
203, 208 (table); (1789-1815),
208-209 (tables); internal, 240,
381-385, 408-411 (tables), 644-
651; down the Mississippi,- 244,
379-385, 675-680; along Western
rivers, 245 ; character of Western,
246, 247; services of peddler in,
249.
Trade, foreign, of New England, 43,
70-74; with the West Indies, 45.
75, 192-196, 207; of Pennsylvania.
46, 70; of New York, 45, 70.
74-78; of Virginia, 69, 79; in
colonies, 69-81; regulated bj'-
Navigation Acts, 120, 127, 148-
151, 154-155, 160, 172; the^
source of national wealth, 129;
stopped by non-importation agree-
ments, 171, 173; between Eng-
land and the United States
(i 784-1 790), 192; necessity of,
201; with the Orient, 202; with
Europe, 207, 208-209 (tables);
unfair as carried on under neutral
flag, 210; injured by British
and French, 212-214. See Carry-
ing-trade, Commerce, Exports,
Imports.
Trade unions, 795; national, 798;
membership of, 800.
Transportation. See Canals, Rail-
roads, Rivers, Roads, Stage-coach.
Travel, by stage, 240, 350, 376-3791
by wagon, 240, 345, 352, 354, 363;
by river, 349, 350, 352, 361, 371-
385; by railroad, 350, 431.
Treaty, commercial, with England
(1783), 185-196; arguments
against, 185, 187-189; effects of
862
INDEX
failure to negotiate, on West
Indies, 194-196; reciprocity
(1812-1854), 420-421.
Trusts, tendency towards, 768-770;
causes of, 771; advantages of,
772-774; effects of, up>on prices,
774; eflfects of, upon wages, 775.
Vitality, national, its wastes and
conservation, 851-853.
Wages (i75o)» i7; (1698), 82; of
women, S3; (1775), 84, 88, iii;
(1748), 85; (1802), 271; (1806),
285; (1816), 344; (1843), 526;
(1869-1901), 809; (1850-1880),
815; (1890-1900), 817, 824, 845,
847; and the tariff, 320, 330, 456,
761; and the pubHc lands, 455-
457; and slavery, 572; and
prices, 808-809 (table), 811; suffi-
cient, 829.
War, of Revolution, economic causes
of, 143-166; social effects of, 181-
184, 219; (of 1812), 217; Civil,
money cost of, 689-691 ; effects of,
on Southern agriculture, 578-582,
605-608, 620-629.
Wealth, of people of United States
(1850-1912), 813; forms of, 814;
comparison of, with other coun-
tries, 815; distribution of, 815,
822-827; growth of large fortunes,
820; expenditure of, 827.
West, expansion toward, prohibited
by Proclamation of 1763, 144;
early settlements in, 234; trade
with, 245, 246; opportunities in;
347-348; routes to, 345, 349, 350,
352-356; classes of population
in, 356-357; building a home in,
360-366; internal improvements
in, 390-392; migration to, 450;
(1880), 779.
West Indies, export of provisions
to (1721), 45, 75; (1774), 192;
trade with, prohibited after Revo-
lution, 193; free trade with,
urged (1784), 193; effects on, of
prohibition of trade with United
States (1780-1787), 194-196.
Wheat, in the colonies, 30-35, 39-
40; in the South, 221, 228; as a
world crop, 414, 438-442; im-
portance of, 636-639.
Woolens, manufacture of, 264, 278-
279, 283 (table), 293-296, 743.
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